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Monday, November9, 1981

Meigs County happenings .•.
Plan hymn sing
A four-night hymn s1nt1 ia beJn8
held thll week at the Racine
Wesleyan .United Methodllt Church
begiMingat7:30eschevening._
Gueot singers Include " Har·
mony" , this evening.; " Voices of
Liberty" , Tuesday; Wednesday,
talent from the host church, and
Thuraday, "Sunriae", Tbe public Is
invited to attend,

Marriage licehse
A marriage license WBB issued to
Stephen Quinn Arnold, 30, Albaliy,
and Juli Kae Cobb, 17, Rt. I, Shade.

Closed Wednesday
The license bureau, located on
Mulberry Ave., will be closed wectSPACE SHUTI'LE HEAT SENSOR - An , these 1111118 have been deployed iu the space shullle
acetylene Iorch applies heal to a six-ounce tem· Columbia and will shut down the launch if an
perature sensor dorlng testing of the unit recently at Irregularity In the prehurner gas temperature is detecEmer.on's Redmon! Division, MlnneapoUs. Twelve of ted within six seconds oflgniHon. (AP La•erpholol.

l

... . . . Plan services

r----:-__;_A....;._r_e--'a,.--d
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----==
-a=-=
ih
~
- s~
Herbert W. Clay
Funeral services for Herbert W.
Clay, 60, who died Nov. 5 at his home
in Dearborn, Mich., were held Saturday. Burial was in Cadillac
Memorial Gardens West.
Surviving from this area are two
brothers, Lando Clay and Samuel ·
Clay; a niece, Mrs. Kenneth (Ruth)

DeLong and a nephew, Ronald Clay.
Attending services were this area
were Mr. and Mr.. Lando Clay, Mr.
and Mrs. Samuel Clay, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth DeLong, Ronald Clay, and
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Gaul. A

Wednesday

nesday, in observance of Veterans
Day.

to the side of vehicle driven by Brenda L. Manuel, 21, Racine.
Chief Miltoo Varian reported that
the accident Occurred on SR 124
acroos from the Syracuse Municipal
Building. '!bOre W1IB moderate
damage to the ~uel vehicle.
j

To sponsor dinner
The Rutland Fire Department will
sponsor its annual Thanksgiving dJn.
ner on Thursday, Nov. 19 from 5
p.m. to 7 p.m. at Rutland Elemen·
tary School.
Tickeis are $3 for adults and for
cblidren and may be purchased at
the Rullnnd Department store; Dutton Drug Store, Middleport; New
York Clothing House, Pomeroy;
Quality Print Shop, Middleport; Bill
Brown by calling 742-'liTI or by con.lacllng any membe r of the fu-e
department.

'2

'

dressing, potatoes, green beans,
rolls, slaw, pie and coffee.

Banquet tonight
The Meigs High School fall sports
banquet will be beld this evening in
the cafeteria at the high school, starling at 6:30 p.m. The dinner Is
potluck.

(/

To meet Tuesday
Middleport Lodge :163 FAM, will

meet Tuesday, Nov, 10, at 7 p.m.
Worlr: in fellow craft deg,ree. All
members are urg"\1 to attend,

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES NOV. &amp;
Ernest Baker, Karen Blanken·
ship, Mrs , Davis Bias and son, Lila
Brown, Eugene Buckley, Myrtle
Coon, Mrs. Curtis Cossin and son,
Mrs. Charles Dennison and son ,
Martha Elkins, Suellen Folden, Ten-

ELBERFELD$

'

FOR JUST

DOTTY MANN

POINTELLE KNIT
CARDIGAN
If you're keeping an eye on the thermometer
- this is the beauty you want to wear! V-neck
cardigan that combines rib knit warmth with
Pointelle design. Full fashioned, two
pockets, belted. Natural and navy.
S,M,L$30.00-42-46$32.00
BEIGE

•

DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY
sorry, No Substitutes except
Beverages which tNive an ad·

ditlonal price.

Served with Whipped
Potatoes, Chicken Gravy,
Cote Slaw, Hot Roll, Butter
and Coffee.

Crow's Family Restaurant
221 w. Main

Ph. 992·5432

Pomeroy, OH.

'

CLEVELAND - Seth Taft, grandson of President William Howard
Taft, announced today he's running for the Republican nominatioo for
governor In 1!112.
The lawyer and former president of the Cuyahoga County bosrd d.
comrnisaioners said be wants to build on what Gov. James Rhodes has
done for Ohio. Rhod~s. also a Republican, can 'I seek a third consecutive term.
Taft said at a news conference he thinks the slate, which has more
than 10 percent unemployment, should belp attract high-technology
. jobs through "carefully selected" inducements.
.
"If it will affect Rlacing jobs in Ohio, then yes, the government
should be available to provide subsidies,'' he said,
"Inducements to industry on a carefully selected basis are a good
idea.''
Taft said jobs, education and adjusting to federal budget cuts are the
critical issues facing Ohio.
"I am a problem solver," Taft, 58," said, citing his experience as
head of the board of conuniSsioner. from .)977 to 1979. He was first
elected a corrunissioner in 1970. "Ohio has tough problems."

U.S. to sell jets to Taiwan

Stop in our Ready to Wear Dept., 2nd
Floor. See all that's new- New Junior
Dresses, Sportswear, Lee Denim Jeans
•in Junior and Misses Sizes.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia - Saudi Arabia accused the Israeli air force
of invading its air space, and a U.S. military source said the Israelis do
it frequently.
·
A Saudi communique said "aircraft of the Israeli enemy violated
our airspace in the kingdom's northwestern regions. Our fighter jela
intercepted them and as a result the enemy planes returned to occupied Arab lands," meaning Israel.
Israel refused to conunenl. But U.S. officials in Washington said
Israeli reconnaissance planes made two flights Monqay in the vicinity
of Saudi Arabia's Tabuk air base,l30 miles southeast of the southern·
mostt!p of Israel.
·
"They operate there !ott of times," said one American official. "It is
common knowledge that the Israelis fly across the border to check
things out."

Blue Cross syslem is solvent

· Christmas Club
Account
.
at the .Farmers Bank..
·Make 49 p~yments
get the .50th

~EE.

The Community ·Owned . Bank

WASHINGTON -Although acknowledging a loss in 1981 cl. more
than $200 million, officials of Blue Cross and Blue Shield are denying
reports that the health insurer's program for govenunent workers Is
threatened with bankruptcy.
. "Despite a loos jn excess of $300 million in 1981, the Blue Cross and
Blue Shield federal employee program is Hnancially sound," said a
statement Issued by James Gillman, vice president of Blue Cross and
Blue Shield AaaOc:lation's federal employee program.
Patrick Korten, spokesman for the federal Office of Perilo~el
. Management, alao denied reporla on Monday that the program, which
covers about 1 million workero, is bordering on inaolvency:
·
· Gillman uid Uta! on Oct. 31, a contract w.. signed between the Of.
nee of Personnel Management and Blue Cross and Blue Shield
"-'eeations for federal employee health coverage In 11182.
He also said that some publlohedaccounts "erroneously stated" that
govvnment workers covered by Blue Cro8s and Blue Shield would
find themselves without health ln8urance protection beginning Jan. 1
uru.a a financial recovery p'rogram ia worlr:ed out with Congress.

Winning lottery numbers

·~

Farmers
8 ank
·

•

'

Besides the '125 million cut in the
House outlay for public achoola, the
Senate also reduced the lower chamber's welfare allocation by about
$200 million.
The budget bill faces a fiBcal
deadline !1. midnight Saturday,
wben a two-week interim budget ex·
pires.

•

at y

CUI:VBLANJ) -

'Jbe winning llll1lber clrawn Monday night bt the

: Ohio Lottery's dall)' game "The Number"- 1111.
The 1at1ery reported eaminCI at tu~.m on the drawing. The ear-

'

Member FDIC

By STEVEN P. ROSENFELD
AP Bualness Writer
Inflation at the wholesale level
rose to an annual rate of 6.8 percent
in October, the govenunent said
today, but the rate for the year still
seems certain to be lower t))an the
II .8 percent wholesale average for
19110.
Higher new car prices were a key
force behind the 0.6 percent increase
last month in tile Producer Price Index .:.. a measure of wholesale prices
for finished goods - while food and

enttne

energy prices fell, the Labor Depart·
mentsaid.
Still, the increase in the wholesnle
index was the largest since the 0.8
percent rise last April. Price boosts
at the wholesale level often presage
higber consumer prices, which could
present more troublesome news for
the Reagan administration as it tries
to strengthen a national economy
apparently in recession.
Indeed, economic activity will
continue to deteriorate into 1982,

1 section, 12 Pages
15 Cent~
A Multimed ~ a Inc. Newspaper

nbl&amp;lwne on lllel of et13,71UO, wbile bolden of winning tickets are
eatllled to ahare fl'lO,IIII.IO, lottery otftc:llllllld.

· State ·weather forecaBtl
a.r tMIP' Low II to . . 11i*1J 11111r W 2 J:qr.lfllllll the
mldlll.'!'llec!w-afJI'I t'l JLmt.--pa F" 'lll'and

Wllbllll1.

Oldt Btl 2 Uhrt! 1r!l- 'l1u 112&amp;7 tli&amp;GiCb8llurdlr- hlr.
Hllbtlrlllll uppll' . .Itmid ... Ttlrritdrl),la tbllll~ llldfrwn
111e add 11110 :.w llllltuniiJ.IIanrlrllloln w11111 IJib aor 1'11111-"""IIIII rrtdiJ llld mart!)&lt; IIU.lolrtoruld 411Mrrdrl,p.

With the final three months of thi•
year being " a real downer\"
Treasury secretary Donald ReMan
said Monday.
One bright spot, however, is that
the economy's slowdown has
reduced corporate demand for
credit, relieving pressure on interest'
rates.
Major banks adopted a 17 percent
prime lending rate Monday, down
from 17.5 percent a week earlier and
30.5 percent in September,

As the slowdown reduces corporate demand for credit, relieving
pressure on interest rates, further
declines are predicted for the prime,
lhe base upon which banks calculate
interest on short-term business
loans to tbeir most creditworthy
borrowers. '
Rates also fell to their lowest level
in more than a year Monday at the
Treasury Department's auction of
$9.4 billion in thre&amp;-and six-month
bills. ·

.,

Middleport Council approves project
Middleport Village Council, reported that response of local con- · in fines and fees. Clerk Jon Buck
meeting in regular session Monday · tractors to the housing rehabilitation read a conununlcation from Colwnnight, gave the required approval program has been good. The project bia Gas of Ohio advising that the
for the rehabilitation of five homes is being carried out through a cost of natural gas to subscribers as
in the conununity.
'167 ,000 HUD grant and there is no of Dec. 4 will be lowered 3.43 cents
According to original plans made cost involved to the homeowner per 1,000 cubic feet and the lower
.by council, approval of the body Is whose residence is selected from a~ rate is !"&lt;peeled to be in effect untii

NEW YORK -: Advanced lighter alrcrafl will soon be approved for . :'1WfA needed for rehabllitatlOll..LIII 'Salem 'Tahoaniiy !he Reagan administration, Tbe New York Times
homes as long as the cost for each
.reported in Tuesday's editions.
runs f8,500 or le~. How_ever, the fiVe
The newspaper quoted sources as saying Taiwan would either be
homes tn quest1oo Will run from
sold F.OE Tigers with upgraded armament and elecl•onics equipment
$10,000 to $19,000 each · for
or the F.-5G TigerBhark, a higher performance plane. The Times did
rehabilitation and more than the
not identify the sources of ita information e11cept to say they worked in
$9,500 figure does reqwre council apthe White House and the departments of Defense and State.
proval.
The officials said the F-16 fighter would not be sold to Taiwan.
Council voted unariimously to go
At the White House on Tuesday, deputy press secretary Larry
ahead with the fl,ve homes upon the
Speakes said no decision had been made as to whether to sell anns ' reconunendation of their advisors
either to Taiwan or to China.
on the project. It was indicated that
China consistently has opposed the sale of any improved anns to
the five homes should be Improved
Taiwan and has said it would pull back from Washington if the sale is
before winter sets in. It was also
approved. Congress could veto Reagan's plans to sell.

Saudi Arabia invades airspace

·Open a

,

The Republican-controlled Senale
approved spendlnc for the 11181-1083
biennium of $13.1 billion, about f/00
million less than the House, controlled bY Democrats.

Predict final months of
1981 to he 'real downer'

Taft announces candidacy for post

•

.ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT.

The higher amount apparently
meant that the conferees also had increased the tu hike from the $1
billion passed by the Senate, but
short of the $1.4 billion House total.
Under discussion - at one point at
least - was a boost of land poe-half
cents in the sales lax, rather than
the 1 cent increase approved earlier
by both chambers.
There also were reports the committee might ezpand the sales tax to
include certain services, such as
auto repair, as the House did in its
initial version.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 10.1981 ·

Brady opens

~te=n=d~.-----,------J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Every Tuesday Night At Crow's

much u three doan at timea, along ' notified HOUle -members to be
witll10 to 15 news reporters, milled present for a full session that day.
M01111wblie, one of the conferees,
oatside the c!OIIed negotiations most
Sen. Hichard H. Finan, R·
of Monday and Monday night.
Riffe and Glllmor said the Cincinnati, let out one scrap of inpackage - once finalized - would formation - that the group agreed
be revealed at a public meeting of on a reviaed method of allocating
the conference committee, probably state aid to pubUc achools.
Earlier, It was learned that the
-toctay but at least before Wednesday, when it suppoeedly will be committee would probably go along
presented for a floor vote, in both with House funding levels for
primary and secondary educatioo. ·
chambers.
Tbe speaker said be was op- The House approved a biennial intimiatic thai the Wednesday floor
crease of $750 miWon, compared to
vote will be achieved and that·he has $625 million In the Senate version.

Vol.l0,N0.147

press room

The fiv.,;term legislator win be
representing ~he new 94th House
District which will include Meigs,
GaUia and Athens Counties.
The meeting will begin at 7:30
p.m. in the Multipurpose-Building.

COLUMBUS - Director Clifford
Reich of the Ohio Department of
Liquor Control announced today that
all state liquor stores, agencies and
departmental offices will be closed
Wednesday, Nov. 11, ip Observance
of Veteran's Day.
The Department of Liquor Control
cific:ea, state liquor stores and agencies will also be closed Thunday,
Nov. 211, In obllervance of Thank&amp;glvlnll Day.
'

e

•

Members of Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion, will conduct
services in front of the Meigs County
Courthouse in Pomeroy at 11 a .m.
daughter-in-law , Mrs. Larry
(Patricia) Gaul Clay, Michigan, for- Wedn esday in observance of
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Final
merly of near Pomeroy, also at- Veterans Day.
touches
were placed on the newly
Post members will meet in front of
tended the funeral.
refurbished
White House press room
the courthouse at 10:45 a .m.
today
for
a
ceremony
that was to in·
· preparatory to conducting the anelude
the
first
official
White House
nual service. The public is invited to
appearance
of
presidential
press
attend. The courthouse will be
secretary
James
S.
Brady
since
he
5:40 p.m., took Diana Neace from
closed in ob:Jervance of the day.
was
shot
March
30.
her residence to Veterans Memorial
Post Commander Gerald Rough
Brady was to help President
Hospital ; at 1:24 p.m. wook William
reports that the annual oyster supReagan
cut the ribbon at a noon
Williams from his Middleport home
per staged at the post home at which
ceremony
fonnally ending a thre&amp;to Veterans . Memorial and at 2:39
tiine World War I veterans were
month,
$166,000
renovation of the
p.m., took Gladys Fife, South Third,
honored recently was highly sucpress
quarters
in
the
West Wing.
to Veterans Memorial. The Ra~ine cessful.
'
Except
for
a
few
doy trips, inUnit at 11 :27 a.m. treated Gary Hart
Forty-five members were present,
cluding
a
brief
visit
to the White
at hia Oak Grove residence, and the along with eight veterans of World
House
on
July
4,
Brady has
Toppers Plains Unit at 2:33 a.m. War I. Special guests were the ·
remained
hospitalized
since
he was
look William Tracewell from the Ar- eighth district first vice commander
shot
in
the
brain
in
the
a8sassination
baugh Addition to St. Joseph and the district chalnnan for the gif·
Hospital in Parkersburg.
ts for the yanks who gave program. attempt on Reagan ootside a
They spoke on the program and the Washington hotel. The president
also was wounded in the gunfire.
benefits it provides for veterans.
Though doctors say Brady, 41, has
made
a remarkable recovery, he is
Forum scheduled
partially poralyzed on the left side
Ward, Ronald White.
A public forwn on the requested and carries his left arm in a slir!g.
rate increase of The General
Deputy press secretary Larry
BffiTHS
Telephone Co. will be held at 11 a .m. Speakes said Brady would meet
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Nisly, Tuesday at the Meigs County Senior privately with Reagan lot ahout 15
daughter, Northup; Mr. and Mrs. Citizens Center by representatives minutes in the Oval Office before the
James Mullins, daughter, Gallipolis, of the Office of Consumers Counsel.
ceremony.
The forum is designed to provid~
At the opening, Reagan will speak
NOV. 7
residential consumers with in- but Brady will not, Speakes said.
Charles Bare, Hayman Barnitz, formation concerning the regulatory Brady's wife, Sarah; mother,
Madge Bayes, Walter Borders,
to theprepare
them Comfor law,
Dorothy
and Kemp,
his mother-inprocess at
Pamela Carnes, Hester Carper, testifying
Public Utility
Mrs,Brady,
1:- Stanley
will atVirgil Chaney , William Curry,
Timyria DeLong, Karen Dempsey, vited.
mission hearings. The public is in- r
Mrs. Larry Frasher and son,
Gregory Gooderham, Douglas
Grady, Mrs. Marion Holcomb and TomeetNov.l2
son, Peggy Ingels, Sharon Johnson,
A friendship meeting of District
Carrie Justice, Marie McGhee, 13, Daughters of America, will be
Gladys Newman, Nellie Perry, Mrs. ·held at the Chester Lodge Hall on
Rex Phillips, and daughter, Virgie Nov.12.
.
Poe, Mrs. William Rogers and son,
A potluck dinner wiU be held at
James Rogers, Kathryn Rood, Mrs. 6:30 p.m. Those attending are to
Terry Smith and son, Meesha l!mith, take a covered dish and their own
Frances Stapleton, Stollie Stowers, table service. They are also to take
George Wilson, Yvonne Wright.
items for an auction. Proceeds from
the auction will go towards expenses
BffiTHS
for the national convention to be held
Mr. . and Mrs. Charles Goheen, at Cincinnati in 1984.
daughter, Wellston.

Closed VVednesday

House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr., D-New Boston, and Olhera s8id
members did not want to discithe ieviaect contents of the bill too
far in advance to avoid pressure
from lobbyists who have staked out
their Ialka since they started late
last week.
11le lobbyists, who numbered u

Copyrighted 1981

A la~ge buck deer was killed
Saturday at 6:45p.m. when it ran in-

Ball to attend

ATHENS - State Representative
Claire "Buzz" Ball (R·Athens) will
be in Pomeroy on Tuesday for the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation .
District annual meeting and
banquet.

door meetings.
'

The Southern Local Athletic
Boosters will meet at 7:30 this

na Gilbert, Mrs. Alna Hall and ·
daughter, James Hauldren, Bessie
Final leaf
Houston, Lori James, Connie JohnNOV. 8
ston, Leon Leggett, Alma Lemon,
Mrs. Roger Berkley and son, · pickup in Middleport
Margaret Loudner, Ja nice Luman, Patricia Brady, Florence Burdette,
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Franklin Martin, Wyoma McGhee, Bonnie . Burnette, Wanda Cooper,
announced
today that this Is the final
Mary McKenzie, Ronald Mullins, Mrs. Michael Davis and son, Tami
week
for
pickup
of leaves by the
Rufus Parrish, James Pierce, Cora Doty, Misty Lane, Betty Neville,
village.
Residents
are
asked to rake
Sayre, Ruby Sexton, Margaret Amy Stewart, Harry Swartz, Mrs.
their
leaves
along
the
curbs
and they
Smith, Shar?n Stewart, Jeffrey Christopher Watson and daughter,
will be picked up by the village this
Bryan Wilbur.
week.

soil banquet

a-

"We are, I tlinlt, nearly completed."
He said Ialka on some minor items
involving welfare, education and
taxes were on lap in today's clooed-

r-r;;;Th;;;e;;;;;;m;;;e;;;nu;;;;;in~cl~u;;;de~s;;t;;;u;;;rnk;;;ey:,;;;;;;e;;;ve;;;run;;;·;;;g;a;tthe;;;;;;hi;;;'g;h;ach;;oo:l:.; ; ; ; ;

DeerkiUed

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions··Mathew
Mayes, Pomeroy; Gladys Fife, Middleport ; John Porter, Racine.
· Saturday Discharges--Charles
Aeiker, Judy McNickle, Phillip
Rasussen, Allen Eichinger, Janet
Neutzling, Maxine Bailey.
Sunday
Admissions--Debbie
Pridemore, Rutland; Marie DixOil,
Coolville ; Leona Hubbard,
Syracuse; Maude Swan. Portland;
Elizabeth Cutler, Pomneroy ; Hazel
Ferrell, Gallipolis; Alice Mills, Middleport.
Sunday Disc harges-John Porter,
Mathew Mayes.

By ROBERT E. MILLER
U.1 elated "-a Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- SenateHOIIIe conferees still were trying to
reach a final agreement on a state
budge\ and tax hike bill today after.
marathon bargaining Monday
behind dosed doors.
Leaders of both parties said they
were near accord but rei.-IID say
what they !lad done to 19W1Jidale
the differing Senate and
versions of the big fiscal package.
Senate·President Paul E. Glllmor,
R-Port Clinton, said near midnight,

Boosters to meet

Squads answer seven weekend calls
Seven calls were answered by
local emergency ·units over the
weekend, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service reports.
On Sunday the Racine Unit at 3:06
p.m., took Maude Swan from her
home in Portland to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and the Tuppers
Plains Unit at 6:54 p.m., took
Clarence Wolfe from his residence to
Doclor.'.Hospital in Nelsonville.
On Sunday, the Middlepor. Unit at

Ohio conferees 'near agreement'

pttcatlms tor--the '" bnpto~tlti;tnts.

February, wa.

There are other applications on file
in addition to the five approved by
council Monday night.
Council approved the monthly
report' of Mayor Fred Hoffman for
October showing receipts of $4143.20

A complaint was lodged that
firemen are making too many trips
to the Stonewood Apartment Complex because the fire alarm is faulty.
Councilman Jack Satterfield will
contact managers of the complex to

see that corrections are made.
Council President Marvin Kelly
was in charge of the meeting with
Mayor Fred Hoffman absent due to
the Meigs athletic banquet. Kelly
commended Mayor Hoffman for his
attendance record pointing out that
laal night was theJirst meetin&amp;.the
mayor has missed in some nlrie
years.
Attending the meeting were Kelly,
Buck, Satterfield and other councilmen, Carl Horky, Dewey Horton
and William Walters.

,.

,.

Miners
to elect
·president
BECKLEY, W.Va. (APJ - In·
cumhenta of the top four positions in
the United Mine Workers' second
largest district were among 14 candidates running in \oday's Beckley·
. based District 29 election.
Ballot boxes were awaiting rank·
arfti..file miners at coal mines
throughout most of southern Weot
Virginia.
District 29 President Dennis Saun·
ders and International Executive
Board member Joe Davidson were
up for re-election tothe~rict's two
most prestigious positions. The,IEB
is the union's policy making body.
Other presidential candidates
were Doliglas Wrlaton and J. Carl
Bunch. A fourth candidate, former
UMW safety chief Everett Accord,
WBB disqualified last week by the
JEB. Accord, who received more
support than any other candidate
during local union nominating conventions 1aat sununer, did not !lave
enough experience to seek a district
office post, the IEB said.
Davidson will faced · competition
from four •challengers In the IEB
race. Also running were Fred
Decker, Wlllia Harold Hill, Kenny J.
Crotty and Francia L Marlin.
Also up for re-election waa district
Vice Preaident Ernest Moore. He
faced oppoeition fl'&lt;lll Floyd Cox and
BWDavll.
'
Three mlnera, Including incumbent Harold Hayden, were run.ling in the HCre!ary-treaaurer'a
race. The clllllq~rs were Bill

Whatsel and BID Peniater.
The DIJirlet ..... cunpleted
the JCIIedllled UMW dlalrict ~
u- In Wilt V1raJaia for 1111,
a1tboalb - In the atale'a
two other primary MleiJ, Dlllrict
Sl and DiJtrlcl 17, wiD baVII to be
rerun. Blrlier ~ In udlltrlcll were tlnWII aat by lbe IEB
and the u.s. Labar Department.

itiQ ......... , . . lire
::::-:~--;-•11··:·:::~==
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.,
- - - -·--- -

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.,
Tyesday. November 10, 1911

The Daily Sentinet-Page-3
I

Commentary
Honor to the veterans..z______________J_am_es_.:r.__K_ilpa_m_·_ck

Pag..-2-The Dally Sentinel '

Pome~oy-Middltport, Ohio
T~esdily, November 10,1981

nothing has been . done by way of fl million goal. This week the black
granite will be ordered. In January
tribute to those who feU in Vietnsm.
stone
carvers will begin inscribing
Our treabnent of the veterans of
the
names of the dead,
Vietnam has provided the final
memorializing
them in the order In
shame uf that sad chapter in our
which
they
fell.
A year hence, on
history. Upward of 8. 7 million perVeterans
Day
of
1982,
the cmnpleted
sons served in Vletnsm during the
memorial
will
be
dedicated.
nine years of that bitter conflict.
It is a pity that this voluntary unAlmost 57,700 died. The survivors
returned In virtual silence: no dertaking should recently have been
parades for them. They came home slowed by ' controversy over the
to a nation that wanted not to memorial design. Let me venture
my own opinion: This will be the
sailors, marines and ainnen have remember, but to forget.
The injustice suffered by Vietoam most moving war memorial ever
participated in our wars. Of that
numher, 25.8 million are living. veterans can never be remedied. erected. The dead are not to be symMore than one million died in com- Those who served in Vietnam did not bolized by stock representationa· of
start the war; it was not their failure soldiers and marines. The design ofbat.
· In keeping with millenia! custom, that led to the miserable ending. fers none of the bombast seen in
we have horiored our warriors,_and Tbei' lived up to the code: Duty, such memorials as the monstrosity
we have especially honored those. Honor, Country. No belated apology in Indianapolis. We are not to have
who went to war and did not return. · wiU erase the contumely the sur- Greek columns, mausolewns, Corinthian curlicues.
vivors experienced.
In courthouse squres both north
Speaking with a poignant, almost ·
But at least we are now weU along
and south, Union and Confederate
unbearable
eloquence, the memorial
in providing deserved tribute to
soldiers, inunobilized in bronze, stiU
offers
only
the names of the dead.
those who did not survive. The Vietgive cause to remember. Almost
The
bibute
is
to these particular innam Veterans Memorial Fund bas
every tnajor city honors its dead of
dividuals.
Theirs
was the ultimate
raised about $2.5 million toward its
World Wars I and II. Until now,
sacrifice; it is to them that honor is
due. The memorial will occupy t'wo
acres in Constitution Gardens in
Washington, close by the Lincoln
Memorial. The very simplicity of the .
lll Court Street
design, based upon two intersecting
Pomeroy, Ohio
granite walls, carries the only
814-9t!-%151
DEVOTED TO THE lNTERESTOFlHE MEIGS-MASON AREA
message that needs to be conveyed:
These were the S7 ,653 men and eight
WASHINGTON - A bugler will
blow taps, flags will fall to half-staff,
!inc~ across our !UIIion this week we
wiU honor the veterans of American
wars, both living and dead, for.the
service they gave their COWltry. It is
always a somber occasion, but this
year brings a note of gratification:
We are about to do something about
Vietnsm.
•
Since the beginning of our.
Republic, 38.9 million soldiers,

women (aU nurses) who died· in the
line uf duty.
Some months ago, in The New
Republlc and.later In the Wan Street
Journal, a wholly !alae report was •
spread that the memorial would not
identify these dead as the dead of
Vietoam. There was not a word of

truth in the tale. Of course the
memorial will be designsted as a
Vietnsm memorial. Some objectors.
hlive read into the design a 'political
message - a pacifist, anti-war
message - but this is the sheerest
fimtasy. The design speaks of
sorrow, not of glory, not of victory,

NallouiF_..._
Aatrln.aColltim
EalteraOiYW.

not of defeat. This aU it says uf Viet- ,,.,
nam.
.
. Congress has given the site lor the ;
inemorial, but the fund Itself must " I
be privately ralaed. For the record:' , ,
The address is VIetnam Veterans · '
Memorial Fund, 1110 Vennont Ave., :
Washington, D. C. 20006.
.,

w

Miami
N.Y. Jeta
New England

PAT WHITEHEAD

BaiUmore

Geaenl M•aager

AuialantPublbbei'/CoatroUer

DALE ROTIIGEB, JR.
"Newa EdltGr
A MEMBER of Tbe AIMCiaied ·Pmll, Inland Dally
AmericiD NeWIIp.per Publbben Aueelatloa.

Prep

Auotiltlotl 1Dd the

•re

l.ETI'Ef:lS OF OPINION
w~komttl. ftey lhiMlld be leu tbaa SID word. loaJ. AU
k:tten •re aubjec:t to ed.IIJq aDd 1111111 bt alpf!lll wltb ume, •ddreu •ad te1ephoDe number. No u..uigned letkn wiU be- publbhN:. Lelten 1hould be Ia good taale, addreu;gg
llauet, oot penomaUIJH.

When E.F.
Hutton worries •••
According to the advertisement, when E.F. Hutton talks, people listen.
Then the ad goes silent. You listen, and hear not a hint of what's on the
mind of E.F. Hutton, the securities finn.
But other sources show E.F. Hulton' is worrying, especially about the
grim condition of the economy. Of a bad recession, for example.
Yes, even a depression is possible in the current environment," says
Edward Yardeni, Hulton's chief economist. That is not his forecast merely a statement of possibility. But he is worrying. Though falling
short of depression, his forecast would make a bear hibernate.
For the current quarter, he foresees a sharp 5.5 percent drop in real
final sales. "Automobile sales should barely reach 7.5 million units and
housing starts should equal a dismal800,000." Cootrast that with earlier
hopes in the industry that sales might exceed 10 million, and with the
claim that the ~~;~lion needs 2 million housing starts a year.
Capital spending - that· is, for plants, equipment and technology
needed to reindustrialize America - "should decrease abnost 10 percent
at an annual rate," in the current quarter of the year, says Yardeni. Yes,
despite the new tax incentives designed to spur capital spending.
While his outlook "does not include .a depression," Yardeni says his
scenario "is perhaps the most optimistic of aU the posible ways the
economy could go." He concedes that investors might not agree with his
optimism. " We sense that many investors are starting to worry
about ... depression," he writes In Hutton'sEconomics Alert letter.
Yardeni foresees the worst of the recession occuring in the current
quarter. "We expect a slUJ!gish recovery during the first half of next
year," he writes. And "vigorOUBgrowth in the second half."
Slilggish ~rowth, as in the first half of the year, would be between 1 percent and 2 percent, he says. And the vigorous growlh to follow would send
gross national product roaring ahead by 7 percent a year from now.
Three factors, he says, are likely to stimulate the recovery:
1. A sharp decline in interest rates. Yardeni says he expects the prime
interest rate, now 17 percent, to I aU to 10 percent by February or March.
2. Acontinued moderation of inflation. "We are forecasting an increase
of only 6.S percent In the gross national product implicit price deflator in
1982 versus about 8.5 percent this year." In the first ,quarter of 1981 the
deflator was as high as 9.8 percent.
3. A boost from Reaganomics. The effect should be felt by mid-19112, and
a second round of tax cuts will be initiated at that time, says the E.F. Hutton economist and vice p~ident. "The various savings and investment
incentives.that are part of the president's economic program should boost
business activity'once the recovery is fully under way."
11

·Today in .history
Today is Tuesday, Nov. 10, the 314th day of 1981. There are 51 days
remaining in the year.
Today'shighlightinhlatory: ·
.
OnNov.10, 19211, Hlrohito wasenthrooedasemperorofJapan.
On tllil date:
In 17'16, the U.S. Marine Corps was founded at Tun'l Tavern In
PNJadelphia.
'
In 11171, explorer Henry Stallley located the milling Scottfah
rnllllonary, O.vid Uvlnglton, In Central Africa.
In lllll, It Will reported that a cholera epidemic in Incila and Paklatan
l8d taken more that l,IGOilvea.,
Ia 19'13, ~ al state Henry Klulnger arrived In Peking lor talks
en tile IIOI'IIIIIli8Ucin ol U.S..QUnae relaliCIIIII.
Ten yean ..o: CcmnunlaHrpnlud crowds £De Cub!''• Fidel Caltro
a d•lni ~when he villled Saatlqo. &lt;lllle.
Five yean qo: S)'IWI peecMeepiDg lt"GGIJI entered Beirut durinB the
r..ebmae clvll .....
0ae ,_. eao: tiiiDI AJierla u 111 lalermedlary, tbe United SWea
IDide wblt It tamed a "poaitlve" r11p •111 to the conditions Ill forth by ·
lrllllortbe n!.-oltbeU AIDerle.n boltag1111.
Todly'l blrtbday: Ad« Rlc:blnl Burton 1111.
.
. 'l'boallht For Today: Tile wwld nr lifter the nat one wiD lie foucbt .
' !wlthrocU.- Albert Elnlteln,Germln-bompllyslclat (ll'lt-1110).

1 2U IM.

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• 134 ...
0 121 339

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0 1&amp;1 217

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Wuhinl!(ton 33, Detroit 31
Miami 30, New England '11, OT
Green Bay 26, New York Giant!! 21
Houston 17, Oakland 16
Philadelphia ~. St.Loul.a 10
Minnesota 2i, Tampa 'Bay 10 .
Chicago 16, Kansu City 13, 0'1' .
~ Francisco 17, Atlanta 14

to, San

Cincinnati

Die~ 17

Denver 2:!, Cle'A!Iand
, 01 .
NeW Orleans 21, Los Angeles 13
New York Jet» 41, Baltimore U
SeatUe 24, Pltt.!lbur~h 21
~ MWIIII)' 1 G•me
Dallas 27, ~~ulfalo 14
Sudly, Noll. IS

NO GAIN - Buffalo Bills qW!rlerback Joe
Ferguson (U) beads to the ground just before Dallaa
Cowboys defeasive end Ed Joaes n!) gelll to bfm·

Baltimore •t ~delphia
Buffalo at St.
Chicago at Green Bay
Tamp~

Was CIA's Casey
a foreign agent ?.____ _ _ _ _ _ _.Tt_a(!_k_Ande
__rs_o_n.

Bay

Los Angele~~ at Cincinnati
New Orleans at Minnesota
N'V Jeb at New England
Pittsburgh at Atlanta

State

Cleveland at San Francisco

Oallaa at Detroit

Washington at NY Giants
Moadlly, Nuv.ll

shares in the restaurant.
i;;ventually' 54 oil companies, ship-

pers and energy-related firms invested in the restaurant. The
scheme raised more than $1.1
million - twice what was needed to
start up the restaurant. Several oil
company executives, including
Walter C. McDonald, a vice
president of Mobil, wound up as officers of ihe restaurant company.
But Gen. Sutowo overlooked one
important tecbnicality in his shakedown scheme: He neglected to
register his stock sales with the
SEC. So the agency brought charges
against Sutowo and Indonesian Enterprises Inc. for sealling

unregistered securities.
Faced with an impressive mass of
evidence, including oil company
documents subpoenaed by the SEC,
the Indonesians signed a consent
decree and were let off with a slap on
the wrist. Indonesian Enterprises
was forbidden to sell any more stock
in the restaurant. There were no
fines or other penalties.
The enterprising general was
recalled tO Indonesia, where he was
placed under house arrest. The companies that had invested their
stockholders' money in the
restaurant were not prosecuted. The
restaurant is stiU in business, but it
has been operating at a loss and is
expected to close soon.
·
Footnote: Casey, who has a sevenfigure stock portfolio, owna almost
$200,000 worth of shares in three of
the companies involved in the
payola. Also by coincidence, Peter
Clark, a fonner attorney In another
Casey law finn - Hail, Casey,
Dickler and Howley - was the SEC
attorney aBSigned to the Indonesian
. case. Clark and other laWYers involved in the case said Casey did not .
participate directly in the Indonesian bribery case. Added CIA
general counsel Stanley Sporkln: "I
don't think there's 11ny question that
no registration (as a foreign agent)
was required." Sporkin also com- ·
plimented the ''very able" Senate investigators who probed Casey's

business dealings and predicted they
would give him a clean bill of ~lth .
SEX AND THE SINGlE ISSUEThe Reagan administration has
made no secret of its hopes .to
abolish the Department of ,,,
Education, but some of the agency's ';
more extreme upponents are clearly · '·
an embarrassmentto its plans.
'"'
For example, a. group called • "
Public Advocate recenUy sent out a , .. ,
mass mailing accualng the depart- •·· •
ment of encouraging homosexuality ,:' ··.
and mandating "graphic and
detailed ses education" 'to nine- • ,,
year-olds. ·The letter al8o charged ·:.
that the deparbnent "wants schools ',-;:
acrOSll America to rorce boys arid · "
girls to share the same locker rooms · · ·
for sports."
Rep. Donald Albosta, D-Mich., for- . ''

warded the PubUc Advocate letter to · ..
Rep. Jack Broolls, 1).Texas, chair- '·::.
man of the House Government
Operations Conunittee. Brooks sent
copies to Education Secretary
Terrel Bell, the attorney general and
the postmaster general for com- . ·

ment.

~~

Bel replied that he was "disturbed
by the innuendoeS contained" In
Public Advocate's material. Terming the group's . charges, "unfounded," he1111id: "The department
does not require sex education
classes." He added that "the department does not require boys and girlS
to share the same locker rooms."

..
'

'
"
·
·

visit~--~------~--~-----A_n_B_~_h~
___
M

King Naban of New Gurdy stepped
out of the. ~Ucopter on the White
House ·lawn and shook hands with
the President of the United States.
Four cannons fired off a 21-gun
salute.

do business with his government.
My reporters Jobn Dillon and Corky
Johnson have seen a copy of the letter.
The general didn't mince words.
"Since the establishment of this
restaurant will be of great benefit to
Indonesia's ~c~nomic development," he wrote, "we request all
companies which have business
relationships with Pertamina to
assist us in this project by participating in the cpital of ' the
restaurant ... ''
According to memos In Exchalll!e
Commission filed, the oll comi&gt;anies ·
got the point. One executive told his
superiors he feared the Indonesian
government would make It tough for
them to operate if they didn't bny

'

you can send us the rest later."
"Couldn't we wail until the
welcoming ceremonies are cOJll.pleted?"
''Of course. Forgive me."

"Nancy and I are honored· you
"Thank you, Mr. President, for
would take time out or your busy
that wonderful salute. What kind of
schedule to visit us."
cannons are Uley?"
"It's my pleasure. ·I was only
The President looked to his . saying to the Queen last week how
military aide. "A hundred and five
much I was looking forward to
millimeters, slr," the aide
.coming to Wasblngton and meeting
whispered.
the.man who alnglehandedly won the
"Would you like one?". the
AWACS battle for Saudi Arabia."
Pi'esident asked the King.
"It was really nothing, your
"I'd rather have 200 ground-tohigbness. The Saudis are our frienground missile launchers - If It's aU
ds, and if anyone deserved AWACS.
the same to you," the King said.
they did."
"l'U talk to cap Weinberger about
''How much do they cost?"
it. WiU you join me whUe we play our
"They're not for sale, your
national anthem?"
highness. We just made a speclal ex· "Just a minute. I want to write
ception In the case of the Saudis,
down the name uf the U.S. Marine
because they've kept the price of oU
down in OPEC." .
helicopter I just new In on. We could
use some of thoae. ''
"Then bow come they raised it two
"We don't have too many In stock
doUars a barrel, and cut back
now, your highness.''
productloo. the day after you per"We'U lillie wbat you've got, and
suaded the Senate to give them the

.

"'
'"'

AWACS?"
Saudi Arabia more than you liked:';
''I'fl,l sorry. I have to ~orne to at~ me."
"That isn't true, your highness. "' ,,'
tention. They're playing the 'StarSpangled Banner.' "
Didn't we give you the 50 F:.. fighter ~·
''That's nb excuse. We're you planes on your last visit?"
~::
friends too. But If we don't get . "Every Banana Republic in South
'AWACS, my people wiD think we're Amlica has F-4 fighter planes.''
...
being treated · as a third-rate
"Why don't we talk about it at the · ''
power."
State DiMer we're glvlni! for yoi. · :·
"The AWACS is overrated, your tonight."
.'
higbness."
"Then how come you made such a
"I'd rather eat in my roorri ir
big deal of it in Congress?"
you're not going to give me ·
···n was as question of pride with AWACS.''
'·
the Saudis. Had we refused to seU
"But Nancy has invited 110 people ·
them, they would have lost face In and she had to borrow china from••
the Arab world.''
the HUton Hotel. Look, I wun't sup- •
"And you don't believe It's a posed to mention it until tOmorrow;·.
question uf iace with my govern- wben we met with AI Halg, but h.W ..
. ment If ·you refuse to sell them to would you like a Stealth bomber lor .

me?"

·"Your highneas,lf weseU AWACS

to every country, the Saudis wiU
decide they're not worth much, and
then we'U have to give them
something else that nObody in the
Middle Eaathas."
"You always liked the Kind or

AWACi?"
.',:
"It makes an AWACS Look like a' '
Mediterranean Fruit Fly."
.,,
"U It's 10 ·good how come you

IRVING, Texas (AP) - The Buffalo BiUs were sailing along toward
a National Football League victory
then disappeared In three minutes in
a stadium fast becoming the "BerN•tloallllaKetbiiU AUOtiiU.
EASTERN CONFERENCE
mnda Triangle" of the National
A.tlattir Dlrill.._
W L ' PeL GB
Football League.
•.
4
J
The
Dallas
Cowboys,
who
have
Philadelphia
4
I
won
15
consecutive
regular-season
New York
2
3
.400
2
J
3
.150
21&gt;
games in Texas Stadium, beat the .
New Jersey .
J
•
.200
'
Billa 27-14 Monday night in a game
Cflltral Divillon
Mihnukee
3
J
.750 vital to the Eastern divisions of the
C1eveland
3
2
.800
'·'1:
American
and National conferences.
Delroit
3 1
.100
"
Chicago
3
4
.429
lt.1
is 8-2, tied with
Dallas
Atlanta
22.5001
Philadelphia
in the NFC East and
2
3
.400
11fi
lndlano
WESTERN CONFI!RI!NCE ·
Buffalo is 6-4 •. a game and a. half
MklwHI Dlvll'behind Miami tn·the AFC East.
4
J
.1110 J
2 , .800 r J
Buffalo was ahead 14-7 with fewer ·
3 3
.100
·~
than
30 seconds left on the clock in
1 2
.600
·~
.:133 2\;
2 4
the
first
half whtin rookie Mike
J
5
.167
3t.1
Downs
intercepted
quarterback Joe
Padll&lt;Dlrilloo
6
0 ).000
Portland
Ferguson
at
the
Dallas
12.
33
'.5003
Phoenix
On
the
first
play
of
the
second hitlf,
2 3
,400
3\.a
LasAngelea
2
3
.400
3h
Golden Slate
quarterback Danny While flipped a
13
.2504
SanDI~o
short pass to tailback Tony Dorsett,
13
.2504
Seatue
Moda)"tGame
who turned it into a 73-yard passCleveland 107, Olicago 101
add-run touchdown.
Tundly'a G•~~~n~
New Jeraey at New York
· With the game lied, rookie corCleveland al Indiana
nerback Everson Walls intercepted
Boldon at Wash.lngton
Milwaukee at Atlanta
Ferguson at the Buffalo 44. Two
Philadelphia at Detroit
plays later, the Cowboys hoodLos Angeles at San Antonio
Kan!l&amp;l! Cl~ a~ Chicago
winked \he Bills on a 37-yard WhitePhoenia: at Denver •
to-Tony Hill flea flicker.
Dallas at ' Portla.nd
Utah at Sarl ·Dih!KD
Turn out the li~hts. In less
SeatUe at Golden State
than
three minutes the . party was
WeUndly'• Game•
KBI\88J:I City ,t~t Boston
Over.
MilwaukH at New Jeney
. "Dorsett's play got us back in the
Ch!C.go •t Phi!Helphla
Los Angeles at HOWiton
game,'' said DaUas Coach Tom LanDallu at SeatU~
dry. "If I'd been Buffalo I would
have come out in the second hall
pretty confident.
"Dorsett's touchdown shook them
N•IJona1 HM"h)' !..apr
Wales CDilfer9t'e
up. When things started going our
Palriell Dlvllto.
way, their confidence broke down."
W L T GF GA PU:
NY Islanders
1123:114219
"The pass to Tony really got us
Phi !.delphia
8$1S460J7
fired up and back into the game,"
Pittsburgh
772~6416
NYRangens
610476412
said While. "He made a great run oo

w-

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Wuhington

Boston

•
1
2

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75
31
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2 4 71
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Campbell Coal~

(APl.aserphoto).

=g

Minnesota

St.Louhl
Ton&gt;nto

Smythe DfyJtiua
10 5 o

Echonlon

Vancouver

LD»An!!eles ,
Col......
C.lpey

10

81

59 20

8 7 3 50

41 IS

8 9 0 70 13 12
3034214 · 9
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·i,Oot... 3

POJDef'GJ BuwUag l.aaea~

·~·

Mlledi.Aeapc

&lt;kL 21J ltBJ
Team
Smith-Nelson Motors
Tony'scarryOut
Ea~o:lell Cluli
Longshola
Smith's Body Shop

' Montini •

ll,l

1ide'sSpor1.Shop
22
Hlyh llefies- John Tyree :J32, Betty Smith 526;

Ray Roachi22, Isabelle Couch 524.
High game - Speed RUS!iell 189,
2011: Tom Smith Ia&amp;, Pal Canwn 1111.

PHILADELPHIA

Incl.

. ,,.
I''
~ ;.J

! ... :

Dallas is !D-9 on Monday nights
now while Buffalo is~.

a

lliwh lftriea: men - Larry Dugan 515: Joe
Elltkhfll9; Darrell, Bob H. lD.
lftries women - Betty Whitlatch 528:
nleBamettflll; BettySmithfl03.

Kh

game men -

lkLZI,l.l

-y-..

~

w

.. -

~y.r

con-

32
211

TM's Insurance
2ll
Roach'aGunShop
2B
Smith'aBodyShop
11
High team series - Roaeh's GWJ Shop 264»;
Fraternal Order of Eagle!l 2504; H. and R.
Firestone H&amp;l.
Utah Ind. atria - Bill Radford 676; Bob H~
IIIey IIn; Jol1n Tyree Mil.
Rfch lelm game - ROICh'a GDII Shop liM;
Fnlen;lal Order a( Ellgla U7; Ro.ch's Gwt

:£·

There's a Great Christmas
in Your Future
HOw can you be so swe? Jual

ind. pme - Tert)' Seidenabe1211 ; Blll
210 ; Bill Smith P .

openyourChristmasCIWnow,
and you1 be sure to halle a

.

tidy sum for holiday gifting

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34

Coal Bucketa
H. and R. Fireslone

31
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'14: I..rryDupnS72, MWnti~an414 .
High pme - RUII C.raori 221, P.t Car.twt 2m ;
Terry Seidenlbelm7, Carolyn Ellchner Ill ,
Team Ml'iea- Tony'II OUT)' Out2017.
Team JIUM- Tofty'sCan')' out 132.

II

Larry DuMalf 1tCI; Joe

Elkich till; CharUe VanMeter 183.
High game women - Betty WhlUalch 206;
Stephanie Barnett 201: Cindy Roush 116.

Team
Eagles

42

Eagles Club
SmliJI'aSOdJShop

PIIIWEI-BlK..d

Wine, (1111$, ID

Poweii'!SuperVa\u
Royal Crown
G. and J . Auto Parts

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· PiU.buroh al Wuhlncton
NY ltl&amp;ndtn: at Toronto
Oetrotl •t Chlra&amp;o
Wlanipeg •t MIMI!IIlla

"Because they didn't uk for it."

good."

HARD TIMES - l!uffalo Bills quarterback, Joe FeriUSOD (12), Is
!rnstrated late In the fourth quarter of Monday night's game Ia Irving,
Texas when Dallas Cowboys' cornerback, Ron Fellows, broke up a pass
to Bills' wide reeeiver, Jerry.Butler. Dallas oulscored Buffalo 27-14. (AP
J.aserpholo).
'
.

36
32
32
29
21

Friend!)' Tavern

Team ~es- EaglesQub 11M3,

Edmcfton •t Hartford
Buffaio •t Nv Rllnctra

~

ped Buffalo's record to 14-1!1-1 against the NFC. Buffalo has failed to
defeat the Cowboys in the three
games of their brief series.
"I'd say we were hurt by the interception at the end of the first
half," said Buffalo Coach Chuck
Knox. "We were down there close
looking at seven or at least three and
they come up with an interception ... then follow that with a
long pass at the start of the second
half.
"Dallas has a helluva football
team and played well.''
Unebacker Phil Villapiano said
the 7J,yard Dorsett play killed the
Bills.•
"We had the·right coverage and a
lock on .Dorsett," said Villapiano.
"Then he escapes. A play like that
can deflate you. It should not have
caused any major alarm but it ended
up being the biggest play of the
game.
"You've got to give the Cowboys
credit ... they stuck to their game
plan and ended up beating us pretty

I

JaymarCoa1 Co.·

.EaoiyW-y

NY· llllndm It tJiMipes
St.Loui• a\ Callfll')'
Mor\treal at Lal Angelel

·

a routine play and it gave irs a great
lift.
"Then when we came back and
took the lead it really put us on the
~ road." .
"It's one of our standard plays,"
Dorsett said. "We ran it·earlier and
the linebacker came over and
knocked· the heck out of me. So the
next time we ran it I saw him
coming and hooked inside of him
... Danny dumped it off and I just
started running."
Dorsett, who rushed for 117 yards
on 28 carries and joined the !,DUOyard rushing club for the fifth consecutive year, had a big hand in t)le
flea-flicker lo Hill. ·
Dorsel\ took a handoff from While
then turned around and flipped the
baU back to him. Hill was wide open
for the touchdown pass to give
Dallas a 21-14lead.
Rafael Septien field goals of 47 and
31 yards completed a 211-point outburst in the third quarter.
Ferguson, who threw a 17-yard
touchdown pass to Jerry Butler in
the first quarter, was intercepted
four times by the young Dallas
secnndary, twice by Everson Walls,
who leads the NFL with 10.
"I've been listening to that...all
week about their weak secondary,"
Ferguson said. "I don't think their
secondary is a problem.
"'l'.he last thing we need is a game
like this ... They outplayed us and
deserved to win."
Buffalo also got a first-half touchdown from halfback Joe Cribbs, who
threw nine yards to Curtis Brown.
White hit tight end Doug Cosbie
with a 12-yard scoring pass in the first period.
The victory gave the Cowboys a
28-9 edge over AFC teams and drop-

Local· bowling

20
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down. However, Whitley came
crashing between them, knocking
Joiner away.
"Whitley did a beautiful job
knocking Joiner loose,'' Gregg said.
"Eddie Edwards helped out, too.
He came off the guy he was blocking
and got back to eliminate (Wes)
Chandler, who was the only man
with a shot at Breeden."
Chandler, who caught one touchdown pass for the Chargers, had
fallen down in the end zone, allowing
Breeden to intercept the pass.
The 102-yard runback tied a
NationalFootball League record.
Gregg cited other small plays that
led to big plays.
One was a dive by· wide receiver
Isaac Curtis to recover a fumble and
set up Cmcinnati's second touchdown.
Gregg said the hard hitting by the
Cincinnati defensive backs on San
Diego receivers happened because
the backs didn't get beat on pass patterns. ·
"We were very aggressive, particularly on defense," Gregg said,
noting that the Bengals sacked
Foul1; six times. •·our secondary
really put some hard shots on their
Wide receivers."

1130311662

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93366

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MontrNI
Buff•lo

your Air Foree?"
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"!'.an It do more things than an '

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Chargers

Cowboys rally, trip Buffalo

Houston •I KaD:IIli City

San Diego at Seattle

•
WASifiNGTON - CIA Diretor
William Casey assured the Office on
Government Ethics earlier this year
that neither he nor his law firm had
ever represented a foreign government.
He was mistaken, and the Senate
Intelligence Committee wanted to
know how Casey could have failed to
mention his own and hi&lt; old law
finn's ties to the Indonesian government four years ago. The committee
asked for internal Treasury Department documents to determine
whether Casey should have
registered as a foreign agent
because of his work for the Indonesians.
Here's the story:
Casey's taw finn, Rogers and
WeUs, represented the Indonesian
government in an embsrrassing
bribery case in um. Casey also
represented Indonesia in efforts to
persuade the Treasury to increase
certain tax breaks for oil companies
doing business there. Rogers and
WeUs registered as foreign agents in
the tax case; Casey did not, and the
Senate conunittee wants to know
why.
The bribery case was a classic
shakedown. Gen. Ibnu Sutowo, head
of Perlamina, the Indonesian state
oil corporation, infonned various oil
companies that they would be wise
to invest in an Indonesian reStaurant
in New York City if they wanted to

during lint qW!rler action Monday niBhl In Texas
Sladlum. Fer~USon on w.bat appeared to be a broken
play tried the right side of the Cowboy line for no gain.

CINC!I)INATI (AP) - Cincinnati
Bengala Coach Forrest Gregg, after
viewing the game liims, was happy
over the small plays as well as the
big ones in Sunday's 4D-17 Natioual
Football League victory over the
San Diego Chargers.
"I'm proud of this team. They
deserve to be in !irst place," Gregg
said MOII!iaY after giving the team
thedayoff.
Cincinnllti, with a 7-3 record, leads
the Cehtral Division of the American
Football Conference by two games.
The Bengals face the Los Angeles
Rams here next Sunday.
·. Gregg said quarterback Ken Anderson, who was injured in the third
quarter at San Diego, was not
seriously hurt. Andersoo was expected to resume practice on Wednesday. Gregg said.
He said the films showed two good
small plays on Louis Breeden's 102yard touchdown run after he intercepted a Dan Fouts pass in the
end zone. They were made by defensi~e linemen Willard Whitley and
Eddie Edw.ards.
Gregg said that Breeden started
upfield, but San Diego receiver
Cha~lie Joiner got hold of him with
one hand and might have pulled him

.

Oakland at Miami

I

BOB HOEFLICH

T PF PA

5
2
I

Denver at

Publi5ber

L

7 1
6

Bdalo

The Daily Sentinel

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Gregg proud of team
aftet big victory over

Forth'e
•
·record.•.

8ta. . . .

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Forest Run Block

k5
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No.3
It
Ht&amp;h lndlridull pme- Slit Grue~e.- 171; Pit
Clnclo llt. 172.
eo-; Co~ Badvoer
471; lueCiru.ertM.

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TamhJtb-•-S.G..-414.
Toamh!lhpme -MtlpiM41l
Toam h l p - -llelpiM UIO.

neKf year! It's lhal simple ...
and that smart! Completed
clubs eam high inlerest too,
so don't delay ... starttoday!

'Watch the kicker

FREE GIFT· FOR OPENING ACCOUNT

BOS'l'ON ( AP) - Jeff Pelln of
Boston University was in his fourth
as a place-kicker when the
1981 campaign got under way. He
had never done anythln(j elle but he
had made 22 field goala and 71 con-

YOO MME 49 REGIIM PAYMENIS AND WE WILL
MilKE 1l£ - fOR YOO.

veniCIIIII.
In 8 game against the Merehant
Marlue, Pe1ln SOIIltOOw IIDt on the
lltld u a defelllllve blldl. Pelln Inten:epted a pal, relamed It 18 yar-

ds, and !ben -lmodlecl aprawUnc
0111 Ol bounds by 8 hard-biWDg op~.

.•

THE
CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY
MID(M II Oil, OHIO

.
I

·
·

•
·

·

·

�--------. ~Tuesday; November 10, 1981

The Dail Sentinel

Ohio high sch4&gt;0
playoff pairings

Meigs athl~tes
honored Monday
ByKATIECROW
Approximately 300 persons at·
tended the annual Meigs Fall Sports
banquet held Monday night at Meigs
High School cafeteria. The event
was sponsored by the Meigs Athletic
Boosters.
Sandy Iannarelli, vice president,
served as master of ceremonies. in
the absense of president Charles .
Cassell.
Honored were members of tbe
football squad, golf team, reserve
and varsity volleyball teams, freshmen footballers, varsity and reserve
cheerleaders.
Head football coach Charles Chancey introduced members of the football squad. Some members were
presented letters while others were
presented plaques.
·
The golf teamwas introduced by
Coach Bill Childs, the reserve
volleyball team by Coach Gary
Walker and the varsity squad by
Coach Karen Walker. Larry Grimes, .
freshman football coach, introduced
members of the freshmen team and
Jeannie Taylor introduced the

..

cheerleaders.
The invocation and benediction

were given by the Rev. Wilbur
Perrin.
Athletes honored were :

MEIGS CHAPTER ~3
. Disabled American Veterans:
Veterans Day dinner Tuesday at
6 p.m. at chapter home, Butternut Ave. Ladies to bring covered
dish.

GOLFTEAM ,
Fred Young, J . R. Waq]ey , BrianWW, 8t'Otl
HarriaOP, Mike Kennedy. Statician, Lori
Ma)'l'll.rd and coach , Blll Childl.
~ERVEVOLLEYBALL

ne McDamel, Cindy Parker, Julie Spencer,

Susanna Wise, Mae Natamota, co-capt., Paula

Nomtilln, Angle p;ratt, Paula Swindell, Maria
Averion, Pegsy · Cremeens, Brenda Cun.
nlngham, Kim Eblin, Ruth Fry, Gayla Haning,

Recion

VAJUIITY VOLLEYBALL
Denise Cobb, Vicky DeBord, co-o apt., Laura

Goggins, Paul&amp; Horton, Natalie Lambert, Suzie

Roush, Bobby Spire~. Bobby Staat; Butch Stiles,

Dan TholllHs, Tony Welch, Jackie Welker and

James Whittington.

VARSITY CHEERLEADERS

-

$-Avon

Laie t-l.f

SENIOR FOOTBALL MEMJIERS-Sealor lootball
members honored Monday Dlgbt at the Melp FaD
Sports banquet were, froirt 1-r, David HoffmaD, Mike
Edwards, Mark Boyd, Greg Tbomas, aad DaVid lao-

aarelll; l!acl&lt;, Dellllls Thomto11, Gary N~oto, Greg
Bush, Roger .Kovalchik, Rudy Murray aad Bob
Ashley.
Absent
was
Bill
Powell.

CHESTER TOWNSHIP
Trustee meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Chester Town Hall.

Hitb School.

ftegioo 1--DIIyton Roth 1~
wood Macfuon · lH{I, Weleome

HARRISONVILLE - The
Golden Age Club of Harrisonville
will hold a free blood pressure
clinic at town hall Tuesday, Nov.
10, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. with
Ferndora Story, R.N. Also along
with blood pressure there will be
a bazaar and bake. sale. The
public Is invited.'

Dlyton.
Dlvillot.ID
Frlclly7:•p.m.pJDH

Rowena Averlon , PAITI Crooks, Paula Swjsher,
Frale)', Cindy Crooks and Tanuny
Eichinger. ·

Regioo 9-Chqrin Falll KeNton 1~
~ St. VIDceat.St. Mary t-1-0, Kent
Roosevelt IUgh School.
Region 10--E\yria Catholic S.0.2 va.

vs.

RESERVE CHEERLEADERS

Renee -w:mis, Paula Horton, Andrea Batey,
Susanna Wtse, Snnya Wise. Krista! Sisson. Me~s
Chicken·, Be Lily Herald and sporu;or, Jean me
Ta}·lor.
C
VARSfi'Y FOOTBALL
Shawn Ea~s. Rlck Edwards, BobA.&lt;Ihley, Greg
Thomas, Rtck Chancey, Nick Riggs, Mike
Jackson •. Jon. Perrin, Dave lannarelli, Grl'g
BWih, Mtke W!IUord, Dave Follrod, Chris Bur·
dette , Roger Kovalchik, Jay Evam, Bill Powell,
Gret: Taylor, Gary Nakamoto, Brian Spencer,
Andy lannarelli, Dennis Thornton, Dave Barr
Bryan Zirkle, Kyle Wood-;, Matt Van Vranken'

Bellevue 9-lo{l,

IJanielJ Field,

Lorain.

Region 11- Waah111don Court Houat 1-1·

Zanesville W'est Muakingwn 104(1
Lancaster High School.
'
Region 12-HamUIM
CincinnuU Deer Park
High School
0 vs.

REGULAR
RACINE
MEETING, Racine Lodge 461,
F &amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday with
election of officers to be held.

DlvW.IV

Stturda7 7:21p.m. ,.mH

Region

13-Burtoo Berk.lhire
1G-Oo{l,

Rootstown

Mike Edwards, Mark Hoyd, Randy Murray'

Mollenkopf

P.l..(l

V8,

9adlum

Warren.
'
Regi_on 14- Tontogany Otatgo t-Hl vs.
Rotstd'ord 7-2-1, Mawnee Hlgh School.

&amp;:ott Pickens, Randy Stewort, Dave Hoffman'
Eddie Blship. Manager, P . J . Harris; Head

coach, Charle~ Chancey; a::illisl.ant coaches Don
Dixon. Fenton Taylor, Mike Barr and: Bob
Ashley; t~am doctor, Dr. Jan~e.s P. Conde.

RACINE Lodge 461, F&amp;AM,
will hold election of officers at a
meeting to be held at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday.

Region 16- Nelsonville-York Io-6-(1 vs.
Coal Grove 8-2-0, Ironton ltigh School.·
Regloo 16- WheelerabUfll 8-2..(1 vs. Bellbrook 9-1..(1, WtiC!ome Stadium, Daytorl.

Dlv""""t

Friday T:JI p.m.

VOUEYBALL SENIORS-Coaches and sealor
members of the volleyball .team bonored were, l·r,

Karen Walker, coach, Vicky DeBord, Laura Smith,
Lorri Snowden, Denise Cobb and Gary Walker, coach.

By Will Grimlley
AP Correopcmdent
Todd sighted Serby, wheeled and
walked to his locker.
"I just want to talk to you," Serby
reportedly said to the 'quarterback.
"I don't like you, " replied Todd,
injecting a 5ome invectives.
"You're not being very mature
about it," the reporter said.
Some more sharp exchanges
followed and, according to wit·
nesses; Todd grabbed Serby and
slammed him against the locker.
The Post, filing a suit, said Serby
suffered a possible concussion, a
collarbone injury and abrasions on
the neck and face.
A sP.,kesman for the hospital
where Serby was treated called the
injury minor, ''a bruise and a cut on
·the nose.''
··
The extent of the injury seemed
inuna terial. The basic question was:
Did the athlete have the right to
react physically?
Todd's reaction \;bowed immaturity
and
lack
of
professionalism. It should be
a learning experieuce for a fine·
talent.
Sports writers are not hired to be
chee~leaders for the home team
although some so become. They ar~'
not supposed to ask marslunallow
q~esti~ns. They .are reporters,
histonans and critics. They should
be permitted to pursue their
profession without fear of retaliation
from . musclemen with small-hoy
hangups.
The best defense for the maligned
athlete: A tough hide, cotton in the
ears. eyes that see without seeing
and an all-star perfonnance on the
field.

Yl.

Columbul Wtttenon :9-l.f, Gahanna
Sdlool.
RegiM 1-St.eul:Jenvllle a.W VI,
licnm Mooney H-4, Austintown

Kirn

Sports World

CANDYSTRIPERS Tui'Sday 7
p.m. in cafeteria at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Election of
officers.

IPd - - IOi&gt;4, Byen FHd,
mo.
Reglan 1-Colwnbua Whiltlloll IG+4

Smith, Lorri Snowden, Andrea Batey, Karen

Lightfoot , Krista! Sisson, Renee Willis, cathy
Dean, Jenny Meadows. Manager, SUe Fry and
Coach, Kanm Walker.
·
FRESHMEN FOOTBALL
James Acree, Joe Barton, Bobby Foster, Scotl
Gheen, Mark Hammond, Bobby Hood, Joe Humphrey, Bret Kom, Tim LeMaster, Eddie Miller,
Doug Priddy, Gary Rlfe, Matt Rlffie, Harry

...

~·

_,,.~

Teresa Prall and coach, Gary Walker.

Today's

Does a professional athlete, his
patience strained by constant
criticism, have ,the right to
·reciprocate with a ·physical attack
o~ the offending critic?
.
The question got some airing last
week after Richard Todd, quarterback for the New York Jets,
shoved reporter Steve Serby of the
New York Post against a locker in
the Jets' clubhouse, with the sporis
writer suffering a minor bruise and
a cut on the nose.
The case went electronic Sunday
when NBC's two announcers, Bob
Trumpy and Bob Costas, got into a
sprightly debate that added some
spark to an otherwise dying game,
won by the Jets over Baltimore 4114.
.
"It points up the situation:that, as .
a professional athlete, you have to
take what the press gives you," said
Trumpy, a former All-Pro tight end
with the Cincinnati Bengals. " If you
fire back, you are a bad guy."
"You can't fire back physically,"
argued Costas, the NBC play-byplayman.
The incident occurred last Wednesday at the Jets' camp. According
to witnesses, Serby, who had written ·
critically of Todd in the past, was in·
terviewing rookie fullback Mike
' Augustyniak.
Todd walked over to Augustyniak
and said, "What are you talking to
him for? He roots for us to lose every
game." Serby ignored the interruption.
Afterward Serby and a New York
radio broadcaster, Ed Ingles, approached Todd and Ingles said:
11
Let's get this . straightened out."

Social Calendar
Tuesday

Rowena ~verton, Oiiie Eblin, co-capt., Roxan.

A MEETING of the Eastern
Local School District Band
,Boosters has been set for 7:30
p.m. Tuesday in the band room.

lllet

Region 17- Mogadore :.U vs. AatdabUla St. John M-o, Solon Hl11h School.
Region
11- New WaahlngtOn Buckeye
Central to-o.o vs. Tiffin Calvert t-1-o nr.
fin Colwnbian High School
'
Reglon 19-CroOksvllle 7-3-0 vs. Newtrk
CaUtolic 9-HI, Zaneaville Hitlh School.
Region 20-Marla Stein Marlon M-1 vs
Waynesville 10·0·0, Dayton Wayn~
HighSchool.

RUTLAND- A Veterans Day
dinner will be held at the Rutland
American Legion Post 467 Wednesday. Post members and thj!ir
families are invited to I he 6:30
p.m. dinner.

POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club Wednesday at noon at
Meigs Inn. Flags to be put up.

MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363
· F&amp;AM Tuesday at 7 p.m. Work In
fellowcraft degree. All members
urged to attend.

Wednesday
VOTE ON updating constitution and by-laws to be taken
at a meeting of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion, Mid·
dleport, at 7:30p.m. Wedn~sday.
REGULAR MEETING of
Pomeroy Chapter 80 RAM and
Bosworth Council 46, R&amp;SM,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Work in
royal master and select master
degrees.
SILVER Cirele Club, Rutland,
will hold free blood pressure
clinic at Hill St. Center 12 noon to
I p.m. Wednesday; Barbara Van
Meter, R.N., attending nurse.

PUBUC HYMN sing each
night through Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at Racine Wesley United
Methodist Church; singers,
Voices of Liberty, Tuesday; local
.chureh talent on Wednesday, and
"Sunriceu on Thursday.

Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Vale Sisson attended
- the D.A.V. Picnic at the Route 33
: Roadside Park, Tuesd3y evening,
Aug.11,

'

Advertialng Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 'lS3 Third Avenue, Nn
York, NewYortl0017.

' ·,1

\m

·~ ,~--

__ ..._

·,·

OUTSTANDING AWARD8-0utstaadlng awards
..ere presented to Roger Kovalcbfl&lt;, outstanding of·
lensive player of the year and Randy Murray, ilatstsndlng d!lfensive player of the year by !be Meigs

County Jaycees. Making the preseatalloa ,was Dave
Harris. Pictared, 1-r, Dav~ Harris, Roger Komchlll
and
Randy
Murray.

OneYear

SINGLBOOPY
•
PRICI!8

1,272

11-J.O 1,232
1-1.0 1,128
7-1.0 1,043
7~1-1

7·&gt;0
1-1.0

...
713
791

'

11.111

::

Dally .......................... "Cenu
&amp;t.cribera not deslring to pay the Carler
m~y rerrut In advance dlrect to The Dally.
Sentinel on a 3, 8 or 12 month bub:. Credft
wiD be giVen carrier each rncQb.
No IUbtcriptiona by ma.U pennjUed ln town.
when: homecarrier~enrice II nallable.
·
MAIL 8llll8CIIIPMIIN8
'*- ud We-I Vir'lbil.

3Month
Siimonth
I Year ·

..... '·"'
....

Five members of the Meigs Chapter of the Future Farmers of
America left Monday morning for
Kansas City where they will attend
the National FF A Convention. In the
group accompanied by Everett
Holcomb, teacher, were Craig Bolin,
Greg Bolen, Bill Holcomb, Mike and
Mark Goeglein.

The Forest Run Methodist Church
will hold a bake sale on Nov . 13 from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Dale C. Warner Insurance Agency in Pomeroy.
All proceeds will go toward putting
storm windows in the church.
The schedule for the pickup of
coupons at the Meigs County Depart·
ment of Health for residents participating in the WIC program is announced.
·

SNOW TIRE SEASO

~_,~

It includes: A thru C, Wednesday,
Nov. 18; D thru H, Thursday, Nov .
19; I thru N, Friday, Nov. 20; N thru
R, Monday, Nov. 23; S thru T,
Tuesday, Nov. 24; W thru Z, Wednesday, Nov. 25. Hours of the pickup

•.

,..

....

REACH THE PUCK - Detroit Red WhiP Reed LanoD, rtpt,
Jlid..a Qllebec Nen~J~i1*' A!doll Stutay from radJDI llle paet,
darlq lint pemd acllaa • NFL play M.....,y IIIPt 11t tile Qllebet
CoiJieam. (AP Luerpllote).·

NEW YORK (AP) - Center
Mychel Thompson, who has helped
the Portland TraU Blazers to a 6-0
start this season, wu .named Player
of the Week in the National Basketball Alsodation. ·
'lbompeon leads the Trail Blazers
with avel'llj8S of 20.1 pointa and 12.2
rebounds, while blocking 12 ahots.
NEW YORK (AP) P'lnel
tolallnll f2.780 were lmpoled ap1n1t
Calvin Murphy of the Houatoo
Rockets and Nona Nixon of the
lAs Angele8 liken for their flgbt
during a NaUonal Bukelball
.Wocla~on~Ocuo.

Januarv

Chester News Notes
Mrs. Golda Frederick and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Baum and
Mr. and Mrs. ·Rex Bailey enjoyed a Jack Frederick attended the r'uneral
service of George G·ladman Friday
weekend trip to Nashville, Tenn.
Miss Laura Jean Eichinger, at Springfield. Mr. Gladman was a
student at Ohio State, spent Friday fonner resident and an uncle to
night with her mother, Opal Golda.
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Smith are aDEichinger.
~.
nouncing
the birth of a son at Holzer
Rev. and Mrs. Carl Hicks called on
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Hollon Sunday' Medical.fenter on Sept. 26. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Richard
evening.
Mrs. Ruby Frederick, Westerville, ~'ick, Sr., !.nd Mr. and Mrs. Dan
and her daughter, Zelma jltewart, Smith. Great-grandmother is Mrs.
Bradbury, were recent visitors of ' Ada Morris.
Mr. and Nlrs. John Hayes.

'.

DAIRY

••
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-

DAIRY

·

DAIRY

-

DAIRY

--

SEMI-BONELESS
'

HAMS.~ ..............~.~:~ 1

DAIRY

Broughton Buttermllk......................... ~.~~l!~! ....99~
Broughton Choc. Lowfat Drlnk •............c:~·!~~.·1.99
valley Bell 2 %. Milk .....................•......... ~~!!~.~. •1.89
Royal Crest 2% Mllk ..............................~~!!~!!.~_1.69
Royal Crest Vit. D. Milk ..........•...........:!.!.~~·~~.... 99~·
Royal Crest Cottage Cheese............~~.~~.~~~:.~.1.19

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DOG FOO.D.......~~.~~.~.~3 ••
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PURE
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SUGAR
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DIET RITE, RC100

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8

16 OZ. BRS. • ,

PRODUCE

LEnUCE .•••••••••••••••••••••••~~ ~!;
BANANAS •••....•.... A LBS. fOR. 1
LB. 69C:
RED GRAPES....••.••..••..••.•.~
ATOES•••••••••.....••• !t'!~..t9'
,.

$ 29

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WIN~~P

APPLES ......... 5"$

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'ONIONS •••••••••••••••••••
3 LBS.&amp;

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TURNIP$ .............. 5 lbs. '1.00

UDAY .910.10

YAMS ••••••••••••••••••• 3 lbl. 69'

'

Ill • - The

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(

Whole or Either End

29

~

Basketball

are from 9 to 11 a.m. on the appointed days.
Those unable to make the appointed day may pick up coupons
Dec. 9, 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. The coupons
are for the months of December and

FOOD V4LUBS

,.••

Member: The Auociated Preu, Inland Dally Pre88 Allaoclation and the . American
Newspaper Plbliahers AuociiUon, NaUonal

'

Calling on Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Sisson Tuesday were Bob Fish,
Cameron, W.Va., and sons, Dennis
and TOjld, New Cumberland, W. Va.,
and the former's grandson, Craig
Fish, Columbus.

Deadline for placing orders is
Nov. 16. Available are Hamlin
seedless oranges, naval oranges,
tangeloes, white, pink and red
grapefruit. Orders may be placed
with any FF A member, the
vocational department of the school
at 992-2158, or 992-7625.

The Eastern High School Band is
holding a cheese and sausage sale
beginning Wednesday. Band mem·
hers will be calling on residents of
the district to take orders. Persons
not contacted may place their orders
with any band member or band·
booster member or they may contact James Wilhelm, band director,
985-4379.

SIJIISCRIP'nON RA'm!
ByCtrrletorMtWR.att
Ooe ....k
OneM-

Published eve.-y aftel1tiXNl, Monday tl!rouah

Friday, lll Court Street, by.thf Ohio VaUey
Publlshlng c - y • Mlllllmodla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohkl4&amp;7tt, ._2158. Second clau
pootage poid all'ommy, Oblo.
0

FRIENDSHIP MEETING of
District 13, Daughters of
America at the Chester Lodge
Hall, Thursday; potluck dinner at
6:30 p.m. Tho~ attending are to
take a covered dish, their own
table service and items for an
auction. Proceeds from the auc· .
tlon will go to help with expenses
on the national convention to be
held in'1984 in Cincinnati.

Orders for fresh Florida citrus
fruit are being taken by the mem·
bers of the Meigs Chapter of the
Future Farmers of America.

POOTMASTER' Send ocldnu 1o 111e DaUy
SenUnel,IIICouriSI.,l'&lt;lmeroy, Olllo-.

(USPS 111-M)
A Dlrill011 al ~lllttmedla, t.r.

P. L. Lidclell, (above right), of Howell, Michigan, wlU be the evangelist,
and James and Rosemary Greeq, I above left), of Canton, ruinois will be
the song evangelists. The public Is Invited.

Announcements-·----------------

.
.
16 OZ SIZE '1 99
Natallna Pepperoni Pizza
...................................
:....... •
Budget ·Pack Sliced Bacon.................•. ~···················~~:.•1.19
•'••
..,. Boston Butt Pork Roast .......•.................................. !-.~~j •1. 19
.."'..
Y4
Pork Loin Silced Into Chops ..............................~~:.•1.29
'·
Center Cut Pork Chops ........................................... ~~:. '2.19
.
LB
Salad
.............................••...
;... 89e
-Fresh Homemade Ham
·
1 LB. 69~
IICI •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
B
t Sliced Bo

The Daily Sentinel

•

Revival services will begin Ibis Tuesday, Nov. 10 aod continue
through Sunday, Nov.15, at the Rutland Church of the Nazarene with services at 7:30p.m. eaeh evening and 10:30 a.m. on Sunday morning. Rev.

SE,NIOR MEMBER of till&gt; JOU
team, J. R. Wamoley wu hOIIOretl at
the 811Dual faD sports ...aquet held
Monday nl«hlat Melga High School. .

.,.

•

Thursday

WORK will. be in the Royal
Master and Select Masters
Degrees when Pomeroy Chapter
80 RAM and Bosworth Council46,
/l&amp;BM, meets at 7:30p.m. Wed. nesday.

VARSITY CHEERLEADERS-Sealor members of banquet helcl Monday night at Meigs High school. Pic· the cheerleading squad and lhe mascot (Marauder lured l·r, Pam Crooks, Betsy Herald (ma~ot) and
Chicken) were honor«! at the annual faD sports Tammy Elchfager. Jeannie Taylor was .the advisor.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

To Unit

I'

•

•

�Tuesday, November 10, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tues(lay; November 10, 1981
•

.

Pomeroy

Mrs. Ann L. Kitzmiller, regent of
the Ohio Society of the Daughters of
lhe American Revolution, was guest
speaker at a luncheon meeting of
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Saturday at the Meigs Inn.
Other guests were from the Nabby
Lee Ames Chapter at Athens and the
French Colony Chapter of Gallipolis.
Mrs. Dwight Mutcher, regent for the
Athens Chapter, and Mrs. Keoneth
Tomlinson, regent for the French
Colony Chapter, were introduced
along with other members of tbe
visiting chapters.
Mrs. Kitzmiller who is one of nint!
members on the national resolutions
conunittee of the National Society
for the Daughters of the American
Revolution, discussed several
rt\solutions adopted by the 19th Continental Congress of the National
Society, including rearming
America, the continuing encroachment of the United Nations on ·
policies of the United Slates, the
need for strengthening the criminal
justice system.and the development

"In our eflorta to bring clean,
wholesome, family entertainment to
our area, the Middleport Fire
Department is sponsoring Magic
Holiday Fantasy a 96-minute indoor
presentation at Meigs Junior High
&amp;hool in the auditorium," Imboden
noted.
Proceeds gained from this annual
lund-raising event will be used for
the group's civic activ'ities and community betterment.
The Magic Holiday Fantasy,
currently on its lOth annual tour of
the U. S. features much new talent
lor 1981, including Chandler and Co. ·
with his fabulous illusion revue. Also
featured are such variety acts as
jugglers, acrobats, balancers, aerial
stars, and trained animals. There is

of national strategic resources.
As for rearming Amerlca, Mrs.
Kitzmiller noted that the resolution
passed by the National Society calls
lor Americans to support the administration's efforta to rebuild the
military strength of the nation.
The Society has also called, she
said, for the repeal of laws and
regulations which restrict the
development of national strategic
resources and limit the production of.
fuel and non-fuel minera[s. The
resolution adopted by the Society
also calls for the appropriate
opening ol Federal Government
owned land .areas lor mineral exploration and development so that
domestic energy and mineral
production can be increased while
enforcihg existing laws to restore
the Ianda to their original natural appearance and condition.
Mrs. Kitzmiller commented on
continued United Nations encorachment on the United Slates and the
consequences which woold supersede the freedoms guaranteed by the

United States Constitution. She. also
noted that the Society calls lor the U.
S. representatives to terminale sup- I
port of.the United Nations.
As for strengthening the criminal
justice system Mrs. Kitzmiller noted
that the position of the Society is that
the mandatory death peABlty for
crimes involving assassination,
murder of law enforcement officers
and public officials, along with
multiple murders, be reinstated,
that there be stiffer Interpretation of
sentence reduction, and stronger
local law enforcement lor the
protection of the innocent.
The state regent also spoke about
tbe Yorktown Bicenteonial marking
the 200th anniversary of the Victory
of the independence of the nation,
Oct, 19. Her general theme was
"America, We Are Keeping It the
Greatest."

Dorothy Cook Corcoran was accepted into the m~mbership of the
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter.

something special for everyone at

this family-fun event.

Above is the master juggler and balancer, the Only man to ride a
unicycle and balance on a small table six feet off the floor. Do~ Phillips

and Co. will appear with Magic Holiday Fantasy Nov. 24 at J\1addleport
Junior High School.
'

TOPS 570 plans bazaar
Plans for a holiday bazaar were
made when the TOPS OH 570 Club of
Pomeroy met recently with 22 members attending.
Members were reminded to Lake
in Christmas or crafty items for the
bazaar with the items to be turned in
within two weeks. Teresa. Wood won
the pumpkin contest and Sharon
"Matson and Garcia Adams are to

come up with a Thanksiving contest.
By Dec. I I'll members are to take a
homemade Christmas ornament to
the meeting.
Helen Hill and Delores Long were
weekly queens for the past ' two
weeks with Trina Faulk and Judy
Wolfe as the runners-up. Information on the Club may be obtained by calling 992-7415.

Slinderella meets
*"

Pomery class, Cheryl Sayre lost the
most weightd, and there was a tie for
runner-up between Etta Mae Hill
stal Smilh at the Monday night and Dean Barnitz.
meeting of the Chester class of Slin- ·
At the Thursday morning exercise
derella. Sue Kibble and Crystal class at Five Ponll;, Cora Folmer
Smith tied for runner-up. In the lost the most weight and Betty Dill
Tuesday morning Mason class, and Evelyn Wood tied fo'r runner-up.
Information on all the classes may
Isabel Lewis, Viq~inia Johnson· ai1d
Helen Grirrun were the best losers · be obtained by calling Jo Ann
for the week. At the Tuesday night Newsome at 992-3382.
Charlotte Smith lost

most

weight and there was a tie for run~
ner-up between Sue Kibble and Cyr-

·Birthday celebrations
Y

'

Barnett

Wesley Allen Barnett, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Wesley Barnett, Cheshire,

was honored with a party on his first
birthday recently at the home of his
grandparents.

A Bugs Bunny theme was carried
out. Attending were his greatgrandmother, Mrs. George Nesselroad, Sr. , his great-aunt, Mrs . Lanny
Jenkins, aunts and uncles, Mr. and
Mrs. Brian Hamilton and daughter,
Jessica Ann, Mr. and Mrs. Neale
Knight, the honoree's parents, and
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.

Young
William Young II recently
celebrated his second birthday with
a party at the home of his parenll;,
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Young.
A Dennis the Menace theme was .
::: ~arried out in the decoralions and
:~· refreshments with cake, ice cream,
.. ; . punch and sloppy joes being served.
.' • Garnes were played with Denise
::, : Hayes
and Benny Ewing winning
.
· pnzes.
Attending were William's grandmother, Mrs. Elmore Boice, Norma
and Myrtis Parker, Mr. and Mrs .
Ben Ewing and children, Benny,
Beth, and Kirn. Also attending were
Joan Weyersmiller, Andy Dillard,
Denise Hayes, Sharon Mattox, Marsha and Jennifer, Wayne Bamhart
and Evelyn and Terrod Clark.
Unable to attend but sending gifts
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Young:,
Sidney; Keith Mattox, Dr. and "Mrs.
Harold Brown and chldren, Palma
Wiles and Eric Dillard.

Gerald Rought , Lincoln
Pomeroy.

Hill,

the fun; it's something we are aU

very excited about.

The Van Noys, direct from Las Vegas, one of the country's comedy bicycle acts, will be preseated by lbe
Middleport Fire Deparnnent sponsored event.

•

Mrs. Thomas Reed and daughters at
Logan. They celebrated the 40th
wedding anniversary of Mr. and
Mrs. Shain with dinner at Old Man's
Cave Lodge.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wills,
daughter Susan and her daughter,
KelU of Chicago, Ill. visited Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. John Stobart
and family and Mrs. Grace Krider.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hart,
daughter Beth and friend, Greg
O'Brien, spent an evening at Cottageville and attended revival services with Mr. an~ Mrs. Alan Cun-

Astrograph

the upconJing circuit assembly of
Jehovah's Witnesses on Nov. 14 and
15 at the Valley High School,

November 11, 1981
Friends will play important
and helpful roles in your affairs
this coming y.e ar. Two in P'ar·
ticular will be prominent - one
an ambitious male, the otl'!er an
older woman .

Lucasville.

Mr. Harrop will be speaking on the
Saturday program while Chigas and
Platner will be working with the
assembly organization:
Louis McClung, assembly
manager, announced the theme of
the confrence as "Subjecting Ourselves to God. 1' He explained that
the program will deal with two

SCORPIO

(Oct.

24-Nov.

22)

You're basically a strong in ·
dividualist, but today there's a
possibili1y you might yield to
peer pressure and do something
against your better judgment.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec.
21) You have the abili1y to
achieve important goals today,
provided you don't aim for 100
many targets at once. Contusion
and frustration would result.
CAPRICORN (Dec
22-Jan.
19) In conversations with friends
today, select 1opics carefully. A
heated debate could result if you
bring up religion or politics with
someone whOse views oppose
,
yours.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- Feb. 19)
Being able to ge1 along with
people from all walks of life is one
of your greatest assets, but today
you may not use 1his admirable
quality when dealing with
authority figures.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mal"ch 20)
There is a possibility you may
have to make a difficult decision
today . Use your best judgment.
Do what you believe to be right
even if outside pressure iS strong.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)

questions: ''To whom will we be in

subjection?" and "To what ex~
tend?" Jehovah's Witnesses feel
that the answer to world peace lies
in understanding . what the Bible
says on the subject.
The highlight of the program will
lake place at 2 p.m. on Sunday with
Dennis Raphtopolis of New York
City •'Peaking on the subject,
"Beliverence in a Time of Anguish."
There wiU be both morning and afternoon sessions that are free of cost
and no collections arc being taken .
All interested persons are welcome.
For further information on the circuit assembly, residents may call
992-3360.

MASON- Mr. and Mrs. Sherman
Ford of Mason went to Pickerington,
Ohio on Saturday for a visit with
their daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Day and sons, Jeff
and Tim. Much to their surprise on
Sunday, the Fords' 49th wedding an-

You have a good earning po1en·
tial .' today, but you could incur
losses through mismanagement
of resources. Don't let what vou
worked so hard for carelessly slip
away .
·
TAURUS

(April

20-May

20)

Being a take-charge type come~
naturally to You today, but you .
must be careful not to ruffle 1he
feathers of associates while
trying 1o run the show.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20}
01hers will help you to a limited
degree today, so don'1 ask for
what you should do yourself . Be
self-sufficient.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Friends will appreciate you more
today if you're not 1oo insist~nt
that everything be done your
wav. Complications are likely if
YOU ge't too bOSSY.
LEO (July 23-Aug.

22)

"You Are the Key 'to Cancer Control" wiU be the battle cry as over
600 American Cancer Society volunteers gather for the 1982 Crusade
Kickoff and Training Conference.
The conference will lake place at the
Hyatt Regency Hotel in Columbus
Nov. 14 and 15.
The conference will provide
training in lund-raising lor its volunteers and give an in-depth look at
how the ACS spends donated dollars.
In 19111 the amount of donated
dollars reached an all time high of
$8,340,958.
The 1932 Crusade goal is to raise
8.5 million dollars for the light

against cancer. Leading the volunteers at the conference and towards
this goal is Ohio Division Crusade
Chainnan, Charles Osburn from
Allen County.
Joe Nuxhall, a former Cincinnati
Reds pitcher and Hamilton County's
Crusade Chairman wiU be guest
speak~r at the awards banquet held
the evening ·of Nov. 14. Volunteers
and county units.wiU be recognized
ofor their achievements in last year's
Crusade. The Meigs County Unit will
be receiving the "Gold Award." This
award is given to units that have a !5
percent increase over their Best
Crusade Year. Meigs County

finished in second place out of 90

units.

,

Nurses representing 44 Ohio county units will be participating In an
educational and selection program
culminating in the aonouncement of
the society's official representative
of hope in cancer control, the 1982
Nurse of Hope. Ohio's 1981 Nurse of
Hope is Gail Bujorian, R.N., of Summit County.
. Paula J. Eichinger, R.N., will be
representing the Meigs County Unit.
Attending the conference from
Meigs County Unit will be: Delores
and Harlis Frank, Pat and Mary
O'Brien, and Ullda Lowther.

. Author criticizes -lawmakers
'

ditions affecting your finances or
career look promising today . You
should be able to handle them
well. Apply the same technique to
calm turmoil at home .
VIRGO

(Aug.

23-Sept.

niversary,

many,

many

guests

arrived at the Day honic lor their
snrprise wedding anniversary.
Among them were Mrs. Ford's
sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Harl of Anderson, Ind. Mrs.
Ford had not seen her sister lor two
years. Also attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Brandenburg and
daughters, Kea and Wendy, Mr. and
Mrs. John Hughes, Raceland, Ky. ;
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Hughes and
children, Kenny and Kristi, Flatwoods, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Craycraf~
Columbus, Ohio; Mrs. Peggy Moore
and sons, Randy, David and Allen
Ray, Wheelersburg, ' Ohio; Mrs.
Doris Smith, Middleport, and Mrs.
Naomi Hughes, Cincinnati.
Mr. and Mrs. Ford received a
telephone call from their son, Ronnie, slating that he and his wile
would not be able to visil with them
as car trouble developed enroute to
Pickerington.
Two anniversary cakes were 'served as well as ice cream, and a full
dinner.

The

honorees

received many gilts.

ningham and children.
Mr. and Mrs ..Fred Sayre and Eric
of Bowerston, Ohio visited her
mother, Mrs. Ethel Johnson, who is
recovering from a stroke, and called
on his sister, Mrs. Ura Morris.
Mrs. Sylvia Wolfe spent a week
with Mr and Mrs. Arthur Hart at
New Haven, W. Va., visited her
grandchildren In Gallipolis, and also
went to Huntington Mall, shopping.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Badgley, KeiU
and ·AmY Joe, of Colwnbus spent a
recent weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Badgley.

careful in joint ventures today,
especially if investment is
required. It's important that all
involved ante up equally.

DEAR CONSUMER REPORTS: I
read with interest your comments
about economical small cars and
noted that they were all foreignmade. I would appreciate your comments on U.S. made cars - those
with the best repair record and fuel
economy.

are the domestic economy cars that
we would recommend, and thi!y are
all essentially equal. The Omni/Horizon (they are basically the
same car) and the Chevette bave
average frequency-of-repair records, according to our surveys. Repair
.data on the new Escort/Lynx have
somewhat higher gas mileage and a
newer design technology than the
Chevette (including front-wheel
drive and more interior room). The
1932 versions of these cars seem fine
in our tests to date.
'l'Iowever, if you're truly concerned about buying American, yod
should realize that the Omni/Horizon has a standard engine
made in Gennany, the Escort and
Lynx have a manual transmission
made in Japan and the Chevette
diesel engine and transmisSion are
Japanese-made.

(What about an older domestic
car? For a special reprint of Conswner Union's evaluation of Good
Buys in Used Cars send $1 for each
copy to CONSUMERS, P. 0. Box 461,
Radio City Station, New York, NY
10019. Be sure to a'jl&lt; lor the reprint

on Used Cars,)
DEAR CONSUMER REPORTS: I
have difficulty understanding the
tenn "natural" as used by commercial food processors. For example, I've seen "natural lemon" on
the label of a lemonade that contains
NO lemon juice.
DEAR READER: The term
" natural" is often used loosely, but
it generally refers to the character
of the ingredients (no preservatives
or artificial additives) and to the
fact that the food has undergone
minimal processing. The Federal
Tt:ade Commission ·taas looked at
limiting the use of the word
"natural" to foods that have undergone only minimal processing
and that have no artificial ingredients. For the time being, however, the
word "natural" really is not a
guarantee of prod'uct contents·.
(Send your questions to: Consumers Union, Box DCB, 256
Washington St., MI. Vernon, NY
!0550. Volume of mail prohibits per·sonal replies.)
(c) 1981, Consumers Union

He's leaving the show after
Jan . 28, just
before
NBC

NEW YORK (~P)' - Singer
Connie Francis says when she
goes on stage lor her first concert
in seven years, "I'm not going to
get through the show without
breaking down."
Miss Francis' career came to a
stop when she was raped at
knilepoint Nov. 8, 1974 after a
concert in the Long Island community of Westbury. On Thursday, Miss Francis returns to the
stage at the Westbury Music
Fair, and, she said, "once I've
done it there, I can do it
anywhere."
, MIS~~ Francis, who at 42 still
sings with the voice of sweet, sad
adolescence, ran through a
medley of "Lipstick on Your
Collar," "Who's Sorry Now" and
'.'Where the Boys Are" in rehearsal Monday.

moves the show

from 12:30 a.m.
EST to I :30 a.m.
to make room for

"The David Letterman Show" at
12:30, the nell•ork
announced
day.
Letterman, the Emmy-winning
comic whose morning show on
NBC fell victim to low ratings,
wiU make his premiere Feb. 2 in
the late-night .slot after "The
Tonight Show."
Both announcements had been
anticipated for some time.

Dahl Iiles bankruptcy
NEW YORK (AP) - Arlene
Dahl, the former film queen now
trying her hand at a TV soap
opera, has filed a personal
bankruptcy petition that lists her
debts as $952,887.
Among them is a $450,000 loan
from the Small Business Administration, which ls suing for
the money.
Miss Dahl, who tried to
establish a cosmetks business,
filed her petition in federal
Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan
under the name Arlene Dahl
&amp;hawn and described herself as
a model, actress and executive.
She reported that she earned
$11,367last year.

·'
Sayder 'completes hosting'

SAYS REMARKS. WERE "CHEAP SHOTS" Aulbor Daalel Keyes, shown wilb bls book oa multi. pen-lily raplsl BIUy Milligan during a promotional
appearance In Columbus Monday, says criticism of
' Mfillgan by slate repreoentatlve Michael Sllnzlano are

~~~i~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;

Mrs.
Hayward
Bissell of Keno on \
Wednesday
evening.

Mr. and Mrs. Homer Hockman
and sons, Jim and Billy, attended
the Roush family reunion at Bob
Evans Shelter House Sunday;
Augusl9.
Tom DarneD and friend, High
Point, N. C., were recent weekend
vi.sitora of IW\fY Darnell and Vera
11lomas.

By the Editors
ol Consumer Reports
··
DEAR CdNSUMER REPORTS:
My 1978 Honda Civic Wagon was
recalled to replace the forward portion of the exhaust pipe with a new
design part to prevent possible
leakage where it connects to the
engine exhaust manifold. Since then,
my car often produces a huge cloud
of smoke when it is started. Is that a
nonnal result of such a repair?
DEAR READER: No, it's not a
normal result. II the smoke is
coming from the replacement piece,
then the smoke may be temporary.
H the smoke is coming from the taU
pipe, the problem may be elsewhere.

Francis returns

Be

Carmel News,
By the Day

Mr. and Mrs. Chris -Hall of
Shadyside spent a weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Billy Hall and Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Lewis. ,

Consumer Reports

from

--Names in the News--

Wolf Pen
News Notes

Crash!

Saturday althe Meigs Inn. She is pictured wilb Mrs.
Kenneth Tomlinson, regent of the French Coloay Chap- ·
ter, Gallipolis; Mrs. Clyde Ingels, regent ol the host
chapter, and Mrs. Dwight Mutchler, regent ol the Nabby Lee Ames Chapter, Athens.

22)

You're very pleasan1 to be with
today,
provided
noe
one
challenges
your
ideas or
methods .
Should
you
be
questioned, they may see another
side of your personality.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)

OHIO SOCIETY REGENT- Mrs. Ann Kitzmiller,
regeal of the Oblo Soclely of the National Daughters of
the American Revolution, left, was guest speaker al
the lunclleon meetlug of the Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution,

DEAR READER: TheoOdgeOmni, Plymouth Horizon, Ford Escort,
Mercury Lynx, and Chevy Chevette

Con·

LETART, W. Va. - Mrs. Ada
Clarke and her sister, Miss Anna
Allen, entertained several members
of the Clarke family of Florida aruJ,
descendants from Sunday until WedMr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver of Hatnesday with a family reunion and at field, Indiana were weekend visitors
that time , lour birthdays were obof Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma.
served. Mrs. Ruth Pickens surprised
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver of Hatthe honorees with a home baked
field, Indiana, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
decorated birthday cake.
Thoma, local, and Mrs. Larry Barr
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. R. M.
were Monday dioner guests of Mrs.
Glarke, Orlando; Rev. and Mrs. H.
Iva
Johnson. Harley Jolmson was
, W. Clarke, Brandon; Mr. and Mrs.
evening
visitor.
A. W. Adams and sons, Buddy and
Bryan
Reeves of Chester was
Aaron, Apopka; Mr. and Mrs. J. A.
weekend
visitor of Mrs. Dorothy
Higgenbotham and son, Jim, Jr.,
Reeves.
Also visiting Sunday
Orange Park, and Mr. and Mrs. F.
evening
were
Mr. and M'rs. Robert
W. Matthews and daughter, Cynthia,
Reeves
and
family.
Portsmouth, Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy of
Columbus were recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy and Mr.
and Mrs. Paul McElroy, Jr. and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith of ·
Kanauga were Monday afternoon
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Smith.
Mrs. Jerry Holly and Mrs. Taylor
Betty Van Meter and Sheryl Johnson spent Sunday afternoon at tho- and daughter, Racine, were Wedhome of Mr. and Mrs. William nesday afternoon visitors of Mrs:
Carclton·and daughters, Angela and Iva Jolmson.
Jennifer, of Racine.
Florence Circle called on Mr. and

Racine Social Events -----------------------------------------By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mrs. Alice Moore, a missionary
from Zaire, was the speaker lor the
· evening following tbe potluck supper
Monday, Oct. 26, at 6 p.m. in the
Fellowship room at First Baptist
Church. Mrs. Moore showed films
and explained the work there. She
and her husband spent 25 years in
that lield and will retum after spending the winter at their home in Ne_w
York. Approximately 60 were in attendance.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Shain fllld
Mrs. Gamel Ervine visited Mr. and

1

Cancer conference to be
held in Columbus this week

Mason Area News Notes

course

Barnett

'

Shower held for Knight
A bridal shower was )leld recently
for Kellie Rought Knight at the
American Legion hall in Pomeroy
hosted by her aunt, Mrs. Lanny
Jenkins.
Cake with a miniature bride and
groom, punch, nuts and mints were
served to the bride's grandmother,
Mrs. George Nesselroad, Sr., her
mother, Mrs. Gerald Rought, Mrs.
David Carter, Vickie and Kathy,
Mrs. Joe Eklich, Mrs. Wesley Barnett, Mrs. Keith Riggs, Mrs. John
Umburger, Mrs. Brian Hamilton,
Miss Rochelle McDaniel, Miss Beth
Gloeckner, Miss Barbara Grueser,
Mrs. Thomas Grueser, Mrs. Thelma
Lytle, Mrs. Richard Karr, Mrs.
Gene Buckley, the honored ·guest,
and her aunt, Mrs. Jenkins.
Sending gifts but unable to attend
were Mrs.. Betty Whitlatch,Mrs.
John Saunders, and Mrs. Thomas
Bowen. Games were played with
prizes going to Barbara Grueser,
Kathy Carter, Mrs. Hamilton, with
Mrs. Karr winning the door prize.
speakers
Edward Harrop n; of Gallipolis,
Arthur Chigas, Middleport, and
Tony Platzer, Point Pleasant, W.
Va. have received assignments for

The Daily sentinel-Page-/

DAR regent. speaks at local
Jo~athan Meigs Chapte~ meet

Final arrangements have been
completed for an exhibition of the
Magic Holiday Fantasy, a national
touring production to appear in Middleport on Tuesday, Nov. 24, according to Kenny Imboden, spokesman and projecl chainnan for the .
Middleport Fire Department.

An advance sale of reduced-rate
tickell; is now in progress throughout
the area by teleohone. The price in
advance is $2.75 each for adult or
child.
The Middleport Fire ~epartment
invites everyone to attend and join in

'

Middleport, Ohio

Is Your
Car Fully
Insured?
Protect your investment .
get collision coverage
for your car! Without
it ... you stand to l01e!

~

214W.Moin
992-6417

Pomeroy, OH.

and Dale C. Warner

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
writer who explored the mind of a
- multi-personality figure says the
world would lose opportunities to un. derstand criminals if legislation
barring criminals from making
profits off their stories becomes Jaw.
Daniel Keyes, who launched a
, ·pi omotlon campaign for his book,
, "1be Minds of Billy Milligan" on
: Monday, attacked legislation to that
: effect frun Rep. Michael A- Slin• ~iano, O.COlumbus. .
' "K;.fe.• · book deals with Billy
, MllllgJin, 28, who was found Innocent
, by reuon of tnsanily in the ·1977
• rapa ot three Ohio state Univenlty
MliiJgan was diagnosed then
, U having 10 dJIIinel peraonalliiM.
Since his treatment began, 14 others
· have emerged.
· Keya IJid MtWsan have worked
on the book lllnc:e 1&amp;79, when
MIIUgan wu being lrellted at Athens

:.coeds.

"cheap shots." Stinzlano bas Introduced legislation
that woold make II illegal for persoas fonnd aol guUiy
by reason of lnaaally to profit from boob, movies or
television productions ol their crimes. (AP Laserphoto).

Mental Healih Center.
Slinziano introduced his bill upon
leamtng the book was in the works.
It lorbida criminals from maldng
any personal profit off books,
moVies or television accounts of
their crimes.
"It's absurd," Keyes said Monday. "Such a law would prevent
books like this from being written
because you couldn't study the
criminal mind. Had this book been
around when . Billy was 14, this
wouldn't have happened, because
the multiple personality would have
been known. Any attempt to do this
is an attempt to prevent the public
from knowing."
Stlnziano, who has been a frequent
critic ot Milligan's treatment and of
the book, said he Introduced the
leglalatlon because he didn't think
criminals should benefit financially
from their crimes.

Keyes said he interviewed 62
people • for the book, saying
Milligan's problems started with
sexual abuse at the hands of a stepfather in Circleville. Tbe stepfather
has denied the charge.
Tbe personalities - Ragen the
protector and Arthur the Englishman - first emerged to protect,
defend, or belp Billy function when
he was a child. The penonaUties
took over completely when BiUy, the
Clft personality, tried to Jwnp off a
school roof In 18'10, Keyes wrote.
The other personalities, who range
frun a ~year-old girl to The
Teacher, 28, said they kept Billy
saleep because they were afraid he
would commit suicide. · It was
through The Teacher that Keyes got
his infonnation on the other personalities.
The story is an immensely.
detailed account of how per-

•

•

Here's a great gift lor
work or play! Comes
complete with 12"
video display. Handsome, one-piece desktop cabinet. Learn to
program with our
easy-to-read manual,
or add an optional
cassette recorder to
use ready-to-ruh
programs_

NEW YORK (AP) - NBC's
"Tomorrow Coast-to-Coast" is
being bwnped to a later time slot,
but host Tom Snyder isn't going
along.

sonalities emerged and at limes
even conununicated with each
other. Ragen and Arthur were in
control most of the time, deciding
who would dominate "the spot," or
who would be allowed to emerge for
certain sltuaUona.
Arthur banished 11 undesirable
personalities from the spot forever,
but allowed them to come forth when
psychiatric treatment started.
Keyes said he visits Billy frequently at the Central Ohlp Forensic Center I!' ColwnbuB. Billy often has
periods when his core personality is
"filled," 1111d Keyes said Mllligan
Will doing all right until the latest
flap over the book.
Keyes said any money Milligan
gets from the book will go to pay his
legal fees and lor a therapist. Slate
lawmakers want Milligan to poy his
medical bllls as well.

'

• For Home or
Professional Use
• Set a Home Budget
• Store Personal
Mailing Lists
• Play Games with the
Whole Family
•16K Memory
• Later- Add More
Memory, Disk-Drives

A DlVISION OF TANOV CORPORATION

~'

.
'
-:,I.
.
-~

SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST
RADIO SHACK STORE
COMPUTER CENTER '
OR PARTICIPATING DEALER

PRICES MAY VARY AT INOIVIOUAL STORES AND DEALERS

•

�1911

Small investment,: large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

Gallia Co. Area Code

Pilblfc Sole
&amp; Auction

Special
Auction

614

446- Galllpolis
367 - Ch@Shi re

f'ublic Notice
1mov

ILB . SR.

submll competll ive
bids al 10:00 o'clock A.M.
on the dat~ of sale . The

216 E . S&amp;c:ond Street

guardian reserve_s the right
to reject an}! or all bid~.

1-(614)·992-3325

Kenneth C. Welsh
Guardian of
Adrienne French

WEDS., NOV. 11

(11 ( 9, 10, 11 .'12, 13, 15,6tc

7:00 P.M.
In memory of our
daughter, Betty ·
Lou
(Kimerl
McNally on her
S4th birthday, Nov.
9th.

HARTFORD ·

COMMOtmy '
CENTER

Hartford, w.
Real

f

Es,ate

E.

Mainll.llllll

POMEROY,O.

General

NEW

LISTING

Lovely, . spacious ·s
bedroom,
21h
bath
home . ~iving room
w/fireplace,
dining
room, equipped kitchen
w/birch custom made
cabinets. , family room,
utility room, large lot on
Lincoln Hill. Pomeroy.

RmBON CUITlNG - Pl"!'sidenl Reagan' and
press secretary JI!Dll!!i S. Brady cut the ribbon to open
the refurbished tWhite House press rOom Monday, as
first lady Nancy Reagan watthes. Brauy, whO was

wounded in the March 30 assassination attempt on the
president, made his first return to the White House for

the ceremony. j AP Laserpholo) .

VISIT Wl'nl HAIG-Secretary of Slate Alexander
Haig, . right, and Jose GuiUermo Garcia, defetllle
ndnister of El Salvador, gesture to photographers
I

•

'

""'• ''f'f'....,

'

H.,

1

STORY
Wilh 4

God wanted another
rose bud so he called
You home June 16th of
this ye!iJr. We will meet,
you some day Inside the
Golden Gates and never
par.t again.

MOBILE HOME . AND
LOT-IN R.Ul'LANDA 12x54 New Moon
Metro with 2 bedrooms,
detached one. car
garage, 1/.o~ acre nice laY"
ing lot, end concrete 1

Loved by
Mom, Dad Hollon,
' Brother Jim

polio. $12,000.

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

area. S4,000 . .
PRICE
REDUCED
DRASTlCALL Y - New

Custom kitchens and appli.ances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbin, electric, and
heating.

carpet throughout, new
wiring, · new furnace,
and new gas line ma_kes
this 2 story. 4 bedroom ·
home on a good street In
Middleport an excellent

buy. Now$31,000.
- ·with a beautiful stair·
way at the end af1d a
pretty fireplace, plus 3
bedrooms, full basement, and a family
room . Price cut to
~leland,

Jr.

·'

•

J '·

CHECKlNG COORDlNATES - Egyptian Air Force Colonen Essam
:· (R) , Commander ol the Egyptian 1\ir Assault forces, goe!i over the drop

· ..z.,ne coordinates with USAF Lt. Colonel George Crocker at Cairo West

DRUGS AND YOUTII- First lady Nancy Reagan lolas.WWiam Banton of Naples, Fla., during a meeUag of the National Federation of Parents for Drug Free Youth, Monday at the White House. (AP Laserpholo).

Airbase. Lt. Colonel Crocker Is the drop zone safely officer for the 82nd
Airborne , which will participating in the joint Egyptian-American
military exer.clse known as "nright Star."

Lei

A r n e r 992-5692

George

OHIO

•

Ca 11742:. 3195

And Home Maintenance
,•Roofing Of all types
•Siding
•RemodeJing
•Free estimates
•70 Yrs. experience

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 949·2160 qr 949-2412

7-S·tiC

"VOU~G'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE"
_Addonsond

.T r a f I e r
Driveways. Small jobs a
,1specialf. Ditcller or
· Trone• Se .,.
'
n r.lce.
Gas &amp; Water Lines

remodeling
_ Roofing onCI gutt&amp;r
work
_ Con,ret work
_ Piumblno and
electrlal;owork
(Fr&amp;&amp; Estimates)

JIM
Ph •

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 -6715or997·7314
l'omero~ . OhiO '?·:JO·Ifc .

f'fL'j~j

·!lr=====H·=Ifc:;t::~====IT)O=.t=======j
I

1

D&amp;D
WELDING SHOP
·REPAIR WORK
•Gas &amp; Electric
•Cutting
·
•Brazing
•20 Yrs.

Exp.

Reasonable Rates
866 South Third
Middleport, OhiO

Nam•-------------------

·

PH· 99 2· 56 63

WANTED TO BUY
.scRAP

( PQmeroy

&amp;

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Accounrs and vouchers of

the
following
harned
fiduciaries have been filed
in the Probate Court, Meigs
County, Ohio, for approval

Scrap

~::'al)

NoW

picking up junk

paid

for · auto bodies,

auto bodies. Top prices

scrap Iron and melals.
1 mile west of Fair·
grounds on Old Rt. Jl.
Mon.·Fri. 8:30 to4:00

Aller Aug. 3
Ph. 992-6564

11 ·6·1 mo.

Addreu----------------Phon•------------------

•

Miller

check your present elec·
trical system.
Residential
&amp; Commercia I

·

COURT, MEIGS COUNTY.

Ph. 614-143·2591
6·15·tlc

For all of your wiring needs.

Wrlle your own od end order by moll wllh lhls
coupon. cancel your od by phone when you get
resulls. Money noi refundable.

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
PROBAtE
DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
·
IN THE MATTER OF SETTLEMENT OF AC·
COUNTS,
PROBATE

Sizes from 4x6-to 12:w:40

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.

Roger Turner 992·5692

Curb Inflation
'
·
Pay Cash for
fl
d
d
.
cIass·I • I II Jan
5ave

·

Utility Buildings
P&amp;S BUILDINGS

_ -_ _ _ _ ___ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ -._.:.,.;.,.____
,

1

SMALL

MILUR ELEctRIC
SERVICE

99HI91
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949·2"0 .

acres . SHOWN BY AP·
POl NTMENT ONLY.

Sizes
"From lOxlO"

10·12-ftc

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

Ph. 843-4912
15.00 Monlhly
Serving the following
townships:
L.ebanon.
Sutton, Letart, Olive.
Orange, Salisbur'l!, Bed·
ford, Chester, Salem,
Sc"ipio,
Rutland,
Harrisonville and Mid··
die port.
10·.12· 1 mo.

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE

WILSON
BUILDERS

From the Smallest
Hta.ter core to the .
largest Radiator.

ANO

PAINTERS

Radiator Specialist

and settlement:

NATHAN BIGGS

CASE NO. 23480 Final

ALSO

35 Yrs. Experience

Account of Rebecca J .
Smith, Administratr ix of
the Estate of Stephen
Eugene Smith, Deceased

1

'1nterior Remodeling"

FREE ESTIMATES
Phone 992-2771
of992·7093

CASE NO. 23179 Final

Account of Ralph Blosser,
Executor of the Estate of
John R . B_losser, Deceased
CASE NO. 23140 Final

Account

of

Mina

..

10·28·1 1mo.

Mae

I
)For Sale
)Announcement

)For Renl

CASE NO. 22598 final

.

·I"
'

~1'

J'

~}-

,:(..,.,;a.•...

.J

. ,

TEXAS WELCOME - King Hussein ol Jordan
· ,.n.;ved late MondaY afternoon for a four day stop in
TeliBB and greeted his danghter-iu-law, Priaeess
•. Flryam (right) who bas been alongside her husband,

Prince Talal, recovering from a slliluc aecldenl In a
HOUBton bospllalsince laal molllh, HUBiein wae mel by
HOUBton Chamber of Commerce Praldent Laule
Welcb (lefi) and a color guard 11J1011 bla arrival. (AP

Laae.-j,boto). .

•

,). ~&lt;'-

~..Jt

FANS- A gh1 boldl ap 111lp a~mlng- ol the Rolling Stones as the
crowd at tbe HarUord CIYic enter Wilted lor them to come on llage
Monday lllghL The Slonea were elated for lwG eaucerta In Barllord, C01111.
.u part of their current United Stales tour. Bath coueerta were almosi lmmedlately,aoldout. (APLaoerpho,lel.
·

•

•

JUDGE

Common Pl~aa Court
~robate Divlstori
Me1gs Countv, Ohio

tll)IO,l!c

18.

1.

_.!.~

I 3. ~~-~-1
-1 ·
$. ·
___
_
_

___
_
··------

I~:

1
1

9. _ _,___.:o__

to. _ _ _ __

IJ12.
·"·-~--_ _ _ __

I1

,,_____
14. ~--'.:....--'15. _ _,:____ _

1
I
I

.
1

.1

1

20.
21.

I
2 2 . - - - - - - II :
23. - - - - - I
24. --~--- I
25. _ _ _ __
·
I
26. --~--- 1
28, - - - - - -

PAR~L~::/llgviCE
•Washers
•Dryers
•Rc;anvn
•Ditpotol•
·•Diahwathert
•Hot Water Tank 1

9-5-tfc

J&amp;f
CONTRACTING

32.
33.

·I

a..

I

•II!XCIYIIIng
BlckiiOe

·~&gt; _ _..:.--'---'-.:....
~--,..._

,111 Court St.

II

eSepllc Syttems
eWiter,S.Wora.

__ ..1

G11 ~lnes

1

IJ
,

eDumpTruck

~lcenNd a. Bonded

Ph. 992·7201

.

Pomaroy,CNt.457''

.
.
-~-~----~-----~--------~
I'

1

I

29"

Mall Thla coupon with Remlnance
Tile Dally Sentinel
.

Call Ken Yaung
For Faat Service

.J.,_j_,6

REESE IMIIiW
TRENCHING
SERVICE
water-Sewer-Electric
Gas Line-Ditches

water Line Haak·ups
septic Tanks
'ed
C ounI Y Cer lll 1
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367•7560

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
·- SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beautlhil, C:ustom

BuiiiGoropa"
lor frH ~ldli11
llllmolts, ·949-21&lt;11 or
949·2160.
Call

No Sundav. Calls
3. 1l·tfc

I ' ~~==~~;:::::;Pr::;;::=~l~·l~·l~tl~c~t=====~~~j

27. ---~~-

I
I
" · - - - - - u.

.

(

17.

19. _ _ __
2; _ _ _

k. .p ·T hitAdfor

I APPLIANCE
I SERVICE

)Wanled ·

Accou-n t of Frances M .
Smart,· Executrix of the
Estate of Paul S. Smart,
Deceased

Account
of
Garnet '
Bachner, Executrix of the
Estate of Dale B&lt;1chner.
Deceased
Unless exceptions are
filed thereto, sa i d accounts
will be for hearing before
said Court on the 9th. day of
December, 1981. at which
time said accounts will be
considered and cootinued
•rom d~y to day until
fmallv d1sposed of .
.Any person interested
may file Written exceptions
to sa1d accounts or to mat··
ters pertaining to the
execution of the trust not
less than five days prior to
the date set for heanng.
Robert E. Buck

NEED MONEY? I need

furniture. New, used or an ·
tlque. AlsO buying gl.lss,
china, gold, silver, coin$,
watch~s , ct)ains. etc . Martin ' s General Store, Mid ·
dleport, Ohio. 992 ·6370 .

In Mason County

675-1333

.....................
-·····
..... .., ......., .... _ . f ~- AOnouncemerits
~·­

Thanks to the voters of
Chester Township tor your
vote
and
support .
Raymond Teaf&lt;?rd,
·
:·-:::;: ::::.: :. ~ ~~ :2

t:" •.

2___ ·- j l)_~~m.!'':!~tn-

__

In loving memory of
Donald Bud Miller who
passed away Nov . 10, 1979.
Th e call was sudden, the
· '
shock severe ,
Little did we know death
was near.
Bud we wish you were
here. '
·
You have been gone 2
years.
would
gone sothink
soon, you
We bedidn't
But we treasure the time
wespentwithyou.

In memory of my Mother
Bertha Batey on her 72nd
birthday.
Sadly missed by . her
daughter.

j

Announcements

TRAPS and TRAPPING
supplies. Gene Hines,
Amesville , Ohio. 614·4486747 . Daily after 1 p.m .
Racirie Vol. Fire Depl.
sponsors a shotgun &amp; rifle
match every Sat. night at
6 :30 p .m . at ,their building
at Bashan . Factory choke
l2 guage shotgun &amp; open
sight '22 rifles.
.... '
Apples, Honey and Sweet
Cider. Grimes, Cle~~~:~~;
Gal.. and Red
Staymen Winesap.
per bushel and up. Cheaper
in volume. Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, SR689 . Phone 614·

669-3785.
The lzaak .Walton Club will
have '· their deer slu.g
shooting match at the
fzaak Walton Farm 3 1( 2
miles south of Chester and
Stlade River Rd.
The
match will start at 1·p.m.
Sunday Nov. 8 and will be
continued each Sunday at
the same time until deer
season.
It will be bench
and off hand Shooting .
Prizes will be turkey, ham ,
and bacon.

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, part~, and
supplies .
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call

446-0294..
TERS .

come in and 675- 6325~fter6p.m .
'
now for our Big
Buck
Contest. Spring
Valley Trading Co ., Spring Cedar Lumber. 675-2510.
regist~r

Valley Plaza.44H025.

TR-A-PPER-Weh-;v~;~om- ~~~E~M~p~I~U~•~M~«~!R~t~~

plete line of trapping .supplies. Traps, dye, wax, and
lures .
Spring
Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025.
- ---- ----~-

NO
HUNTING
or
trespassing on any of my
property , day or night in
Cheshire Twp. Gallia co.,
awned by J . Arthur Evans.
Violaters will be legafly
procuted .

'"'- - - -

---, --

--

For bulk deliVery of
gasoline, heating oil and
diesel fuel. call Landmark,
992-2181. Pomeroy, Oh.
Horses, ponies, hOrse
trailer, riding lessons. Hoof
Hallow 614·698·3290.
Gun

Shoot Racine Gun
EverY Sun. starting
at 1 p.m. Factory choke
guns onlv .
~lub .

4

-~-= ];Iv~~i ===

ANY PERSON who has
arwthing to give away and
does not offer or aftPmpt to
offer any other thihg for
sale mav place an ad in this
Column . There will be no
tharge to the advertiser.
Solid white male pup. 10
mo. old, part Shepherd.
Call 245-5578.

5 puppies part Beagle, 4
wks. old. Call379-2115 .
4cats . One male, black and
white. Three female$, one
yellow, two calicos . Call

388 8510 .
J

young cats, good
mousers . .Call245·5804.

3 kittens, black with green
eyes. 2 males, 1 female , lit·
tertrained. 992·3717.

Sacred Heart Church· An·
,nual Bazaar Nov. 12, 4 month old Flame Point
Pomeroy. Cream Baked Siamese kitten. Litter box
chicken or ham dinners. trained. 992·5512 .
games far all, 'door prizes.
·4:30·? . Everyone welcome.
7 puppies. Part shephard &amp;
part German Shephard
NEEDED. Anyone having 992·5864.
wringer type washer to
give a'way call992· 7744.

-

~~-~

-------

,~ ~ =~D~t~~(f~~~= =-

NO
hunting
&amp;
no
trespassing without wri.tten
permission on Woolhan
Farms at Apple Grove.

LOST Reward for in ·
formation
lead ing
to
·recovery of Brady a black
115 lb. Great Dane with un ·
cropped ears. Last seen in
NO hunting &amp; trespassing Centenary area. Call 446·
orr Bright McCausland 7417 or 446-5132 .
Farm operated by Woolhan
Farms.
Small
red
mal e
Pomeran ian . Childs &amp;
No Hunting or Trespassing family pet. lost in Racine
on Kenneth Watson farm, Village. 949 ·2000 or 949without
writt~n
per · 2591.
mis$iOn . Kenneth (Butch)
- - - - - ·-------~
Watsoh,
7
Yard Sale

·---- ...
------------ ------~-

- ~

••

HARRISON
TV SERVICE
N(M ·

OPEN

Used Color TV Sets for
sale. .
•
NEW PHONE NO :

992-6259

t
276 Syea more S '
Midcllilport, Ohio
9-21-tlc

HAIR REMEDIES

!~~~~~v fe1~~~:.·
New HO!In:
Mon. 11:00.1:08
Tuas. ll:G0-5:00
Weds.JO:DI-1:10
Thurs. ll:OH:OO
Fri.IO:G0-5:00
UnlonAve.
Pomeroy, OhiO
PHONE f92·302l .
ApjMhlffntnls

not

Stolen Property . Antique
kitchen safe . Antique
dining room cabinet. Two
rocking · chairs . Other
Items . Anyone knowing or
seeln9 this furniture being
hauled In the vicinity of
Flatrock, WV on October 10
or later, a liberal reward is

otferecj . 675· 1302.
POSITIVILY no hunting on
the old H . .c. Brown Farm
opposite Racine · locks
Letart, wv . Signed Bill Me ·
Dan let .
Children's Gymnastics and
•
E
Ladles
xercise, Wed ·
nesday evening in Pt.
Pleasant.
Instructor:

·[ I ~;:-J

ntcnNry. lllo~t~rerly K~tt-n·Kurl

-

1()·28- I

(. ==_}yant~tOeUi-=--=
WANT TO BUY Old furniture and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swa in,
256·1967 in the evenings .
CASH PAID for clean , iate
model' used cars. Smith
Buick ·Pontiac, GAllipolis,
Ohio. Call446·2282.
Antique Bisque and China
Dolls, old quilts, oriental
rugs, sterling silver, olc;fcut
glass, lamps, and art glass.

Call

304 -5~5 -5545.

Ask for

Ron, 12 Noon flllll p.m .

dental gold. Class rings,
wedding ,.ings, silver coins
or anything
~tamped
sterling . . Clarks Jewelry
Slore. Gollllpolls 446·2691 or
992·205.4 in Pomeroy1

11

Help Wanted
Full · time
live ·•in
housemanager to work
with persons handicapped
with mental retardation at
group home in Gallipolis,
Oh. Job requires that you
supervise staff and that
you train and supervise
clients in personal hygie'ne
and home living skjl.ls.
Weekends off. Room, board
and benef its provided. hi'Oh
School degree required;
college education and exPerience preferred. Send
resume to Robin Ely, P.O~
Box 604, Jackson, Oh 45640.
Buckeye c;ommunity Ser·
vices is and equal op·
portun.i ty employe-r.
-

your new
in right."

pi

Junk cars: with or without
. ~; ' motors. and bollerles. Call
1
tture 111n 388·9303.

•

-

•

,..,.

-----~ ------;-1;' "

Part-time Community Service.s Worker to work .with
boy handicapped with mantal retardation . A 11)'11ih
school degree Is reqUY)d
and exper ience in wortring
with persons with meOtiil
retardation is prefer~.
Please call Marie Ho"(b,·
379· 26~, between 7: oo~~.oo
PM . Buckeye commaJR!'tY
Services ls an equat.~ 6p·
portunity employer . .. ...
":-

__ ....,._ ...____

~..;.....~

Why settle for less. Sell :the
best. Sell Avon . For ~~e
information t all 446 · 33SII~r
1•n354.

=t'

;

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

Full / part time sateS.: ; Mo
commission &amp; mulfi·~tel
bonus .
Food
prod~t
everyone
uses.
C&amp;JI
Marianne 446· 1988.

-

~-.----k -,

Responsible babysitter
needed for occassionat
evenings &amp; weekends. -My
home only . Raccoon Rd.
area . Cali446-8196.
-

-----·-

Exe c utive
direC:tol
minimum of
master:s
degree or work equilvall!nt.
Min imum of three years
experience
in
ac;l ministratianand 3 years,exper ience in the field of
Alcoholism send resume by
Nov . 19th to SEARCH 207
1/ 2 North
Market,
Waverly , Oh 45690. E .O.E .
G E T VALUABLE train ing
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tlnel rout e ca,.rier . Phone
us right away and get on
th e eli gibility list at . 992·
2156or992·2157 .
'
Full er · Brush Represertative in your area. 6-atl
304 ·273·4559. or write
1,
Box 243, Ravenswood,
W .Va. 26164.
'·,

Rt·

- ...

~-

Older lady to live in :With
light housework . Call Mvr·
tle Harr i.son at 992·3704; :
..

-

~ ~ "t.

RN . L.acal 100 bed ICF~ Is
currently seeking a direc·
tor of nursing . Are you the
ded icated professional who
is qualified by education
and' experience , and who
shares our·committment to
high standards of patl ent
care? Your salary will
commensurate with your
exper ience and our benefit
package is liberal. Sceni c
Hills Nursing Center. Box
262 , Bidwell, Ohio-45614 . Attn :
Kim
Nye,
Ad ·
mini strator. We are an
Equal Opportunity Employer .·

i2

SituatiO"nS Wanted
·~-~

-

-:---~-

Widower retired to small
farm , average income.
jogs, hunts, fishes, gar
dens , hoping to (:ontact
healthy
non - smoking
woman under sixty five
who likes outdoors. Replys
please give phone no. and
address. Pertinent in ·
formation to P.O. Box 102 .

Albany, Oh 45710 .

--

- - - - --

-

~
-·
- ~Bookkeeper or secretary
position full or part time, 12
yrs. experience, good local
references . Call 446·0183 or
446-0871, Karen.
••

- .,- --

•'"''''

. _,.,..,.

Rummage Sale · Grace
United Methodist Church
on Friday 13th at 9AM.

.Helen
Call446'8014
«6-70«
.
Zinn. or4:30
lo 7:30.
BUYING GOLD&amp; SILVER
- - - - - - - - paying cash for anything
LAFF- A- DAY slamped 10K, I4K, 18K and

.~ ..,- -·· - ~--

R~\¥ furs, hides, ·s crap ·
metals. ·' batte·rles,
radiator s, ginseng, yeUow
ro·o t 1 arld merchandise
brokering. Harper"Ha)steact Salvage Company,- 300
ElevenTh Street. 675·5868 .
Also Flea Market Qpen
daily . Open
Monclay Friday 1·5 pm .

LOCUST posts, 8 fl . loog .
ATTENTION DEER HUN· 4" smc;ill tip-chip poles. 304·

'-'

Swisher. Executri·x of the
Estate of Charles Wayne
Swisher, OeceaSed
CASE NO . 23319 Final
Account of Pamelia M
Kelly , E xecutrix of thci
Estate of Donald Edwin
Kelly, Deceased

' CASE NO . 23489 . Final ·

ber Shop, Middleporl. 992·
3476.

992·2156

an~a~;dn;;~~e/a~J L~.z;:;

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Farm Buildings

PH. 992-6011
992·7656

8·20·tfc

,,9,000.
REALTOR
Henry E.

Housing
Headquarters

ALL STEEL

FREE
ESTIMATES.·

HUGE LIVING ROOM

.Beautiful brick two
story hOme with a
magnificent view of the
Ohio
River.
Three
bedrooms. 2V2 b.tths,for·
mar
living
room
w/fireplace,
d.inlng
room
w/tireplace,
breakfast room and
built·in kitchen. Full
basement. 3 car garage
with attic storage.
Privacy in town on three

446-2342

located on ~38.
11 ACRES - on Rt. 7
near Chester. Can be

PRiCED RIGHT.

silVer, stc·rling,
iewelry , rings , old coins &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Bar·
1n .MI;!:igs County

l~==================~~~==================~~==================n M~~~~ ___ _

HANDYMAN SPECIAL

$65,000.00.
RIVERVIEW EXECU·
TIVE
ESTATE

. For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Diesel
Gas
Heating Oil.

Gold,

In Gallia Cou.ntv

Nice

for $32,000.
WE WILL TAKE CARE
OF YOUR
REAL
ESTATE
SELLING.
CALL 992·3876, HELEN
&amp; GOROON TEAFORD
AND SUE MURPHY.

•

10 PLACE AN AD CALL

01
good truck land . 4
bedroom country home,
hot water furnace , nice
birch kitchen, wood·
burner, large wood$hed

' 614·992· 2181

CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest
enQ . $12.50 per ton. Bundled
s·lab. $10.50 per
ton .
Deliverd to Ohio Pallet co.,
Rock Spr i ngs
Rd .,
Pomeroy . 992·2689 .

va.

4S8-, Leon
516-'-- Apple Grove
J'/'J- Mason
H82- New Haven
895-Letart
937-Butlalo

•

only Sl7,5oo.
3 LEVEL .ACRES -

POMEROY
LANpMARK

Pomeroy, Oh . Or 992·7760 .

67S- Pf. Pleasant

One

divided into lots. Trailer
or building. Also an old 7
room house and a 12xS2
'two bedroom trailer . All

Wr lle : M,D. Miller, ·Rt . 4,

A rea Code 304

room home on 12 acres
of lcind on State Rt.
Bath, city
water,
natural gas heat and one
outbuilding In Racine
SchOOl District .

~=========~J===~==~;;;!::::;~~~~~~::~~~~~

3 room house and
path! Some furniture.
Small lot . .Minersville

ming ·two story an elec·
tric home . .Large living
room, formal dining
room,
kitchen with
breakfaSt nook . ThreC:
bedrooms, 2 full baths,
and walk up attic. Full
basement With woad
burner: Ooobte garage.
Close to grade school.

Mason Co .• w.

6

•·
s
•
B uszn·e ss ervzces

TWO ' BIG LOTS- And
a one floor plan home·
with 5 · rooms,
2
bedroom$, and nice
back porch. Very low
utilitY bills. $21,000.

POMEROY,
IDEAL
LOCATION .. :- Char·

-

2 car garage with apt.
over . Has bath, furnace,
equipped kitchena and
enclosed porch. Want

CALL:

bedrooms, family room,
large kitchen, living
rO&lt;'tm, and bath. dver 1h
acre of yard with fruit
trees and a place for a
garden. $20,500.

lovely two $tory
with swimming
Four bedrooms,
baths with delUxe
chen and b~eakfast
room. formal living
w/firetace. formal
dining, family room
with fireplace and grilL
full basement and 2 car
garage .
Intercom,
custom drapes and ac ·
cent wallpaper. Near
Baum Addition. Call for
your private showing.

·I, A
,,..

OLDER
HOME

$75,000.00.
COUNTRY . EXECUTI·
VE
ESTATE
Beautifu I 2 acres ae&lt;:emu

Mon~J' at the State Department in Washington prior
to their meeting. (AP Laserphoto •.

A

real countrt home on
approx. 2 acres with 4
beOrooms, full base·
ment: carport, fully in·
sulated, and forced air
gas heat. Now $39,000.

GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker

LISTING

NEW ·LISTING -

ba k l!d you a
o.;,,;;u..i birl~day cake
Took it to your
at Providence
Hospital in Sandusky~
Ohio. We enjoyed being
together. We laugh,d,
h~d tears, and pro~~yed
together. You had so·
much
faith
and
Willpower to live.

~

OFFICE 74N003

NEW

GAI!AGE APT. -

iii~~if~ijii~~~~ OWNER
REDUCED THEHAS
PRICE
RACINE AREA -

Phone

BEDS-IRON, BRASS, Old
furniture, gold~ si lver
dollars, wOOd ice bOxes,
stone Iars, antiques. etc.·,
Complete
households .

'IY'J - Middltlport
Pomeroy
91:15 - Chester
J4l ...:. Portland
241-Letart Falls
949- Racine ·
742-Rutland

245- Rio Grande
256- Gu'yan Dis f.
643- Arabia Dist .

level acre Ideal for gar·
dening. Large garage
~2x36 and a 2 bedrOOfO
home with hot air fur·
nace, bath. nice , car·
petinQ. basement, porches located at T.uppers
Plains. Will sell on time .

992·US9

M e igs CO. Area Code

,14

JBa~ v~nton

I .

Wanted to buy Trailer
axles. tires &amp; wheel . Call J ,
L HaHield 379·2322 .

General

Real estate

Wonled tO BU:t__

9

(;(,.~sifietl Pages cover the
Ji•llur~inp telephone exchange....

---

---- ~ -·--;

.__

House cleaning . 1 day a
week on regular basis. Call

Sharon at94NI60 .

•

�.'
10, 1981

KIT 'N' CARLYlE "'
BJ!IARPATCH KEI'INELS
Boarding and g.--nt,..
AKC
Gordon aettera,
Envlllh Cocker Spaniels.
Call318· 9790.
,
EA N USED MOBI LE
Ha'le · room &amp; board for CL
HOME S
K ESSEL 'S

e lderly. Reasonable rates.
99115022.
c a r.p en try, panelin g .
ceil ing tile and f loor tile.
992- ~ 759 .

13

Insurance

SANDY A ND BE AVER Insurance Co. ha s offered
serv ices for fire insurance
cov;er age in Gall ia County
for . a lmost a century.
Farm, home and persona l

Q UA LITY
MOBILE
HOME SA LE S, 4 MI.
WE ST, G ALLIPOLI S, RT
35. P HON E -1-16-3868.

1966 12x45 New Moon office
trailer, hot water hea ter,
A/C, fue l oil furnance, 1 full
ba th. $3,000 . Ca(l 675·2600 .
12x65 mobile home , 2 lots in
Plantz Subdivis ion. Ca ll
446·1294.

2 bdr. apartment unfurn.,
In Crown City, Ohio. Call
5 r m . house 1 112 m iles 256·6520.
s outh of Gallipolis. Call after 3 PM, -446·0571.
Mobile home In city centra l
a ir and heat, adul ts only,
2 bdr . house In Middleport, dep. 4441·0338.
ttdults , no pets, $150. mo.
plus .sec. de p . &amp; utilities. 2 BEDROOM apartment;
992·21318AM to 6PM.
kitchen furnished, HUD
program, u1111tles paid, If
3 brd., 2 bath, trH evel, gas qualif ied. 30H75-51CU or
heat, rural water. Call 446· 304-675-7364.

2957.

-- ---------

A U T OMOB I L E
IN ·
SURAN CE
bee n ca n•
c e ll e d ?
Lo s t
yo u r
operator's License? Phone
992-2143

1972 Arlington 12x60, gOOd
cond., furnis hed, $5,500.
Call after 6, 245·9534.

15

12x5 0 Kentu c kian , 2
bedroom, 1 b8th, good c ond iti on, new carpe t. onl y
$3,795. Ca ll446·3547.

2 be droom all e lectr ic ran·
c h s tyl e hOme . 1 mile from
Rac ine . Refe rences and
depos it required. Ava ilable
Nov . 15. Ca ll 614-949·2849 .

19H Kirkwood 12x6S two
bedr o om , ai r c ond .,
aWning, on rented lot . Ph .
675·5739 afte r 5:00.

2 bedroom house, furnished. Brown's. Tr ailer
Park, Miner s vi lie. 992·332.4.

MOBIL E HOME ADD·A·
ROOM. Complete sele ction
of s izes a nd floor plans
de li ve red &amp; in stalled . Fren·
ch City Mobile Home, Inc .
Ca ll446·9340.

4 rooms and balh, full
basement, natura l gas fur·
nace. Storn w indows and
doors. Some insulation . All
new paint.
Stove &amp;
refrigerator furnished . 992·

Schools Instruction

F' I ANO &amp; m usic read i ng
cla sses. 7 years teaching
304·675-:J....O.

exp~rien ce .

18

Wanted to De

B a b y sitting, n e ar
Foodland, any age, meals,

snacks. toys, safe home,
references . Call _...·7146,
S35 w eekl y ,

Vl c!iie's Cl ea nin g St&gt;rvi ce.
Gene r!'ll house cleaning.
Coll256-1365 or 250-6610.

•

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

Wash &amp; wax tra ilers or
pa int roofs . Ca ll ..f.46..2218 .

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

Bookkeeper o r secretary
pOsiti on fu ll or part time, 12
yi-s. exper ie nce, good local
refere nces . Ca ll ~- 0183 or
446·0871 , Karen .

'

TV service calls. C&amp;ll 992·
2d34. Al So used color TV for
s ale .

•

I !nanEial
-L-------~~------

2~

Business

Opportunity

Tf aile r Park, 15 spaces
pP\Js 3 bd r ., brick home on
a~prp)(. 3 a c res, w ill ctlvlde,
$\50,000 wi t h 5(),000 down,
O\N'ner will carry . Alw ,ark
owned t ra ile rs a valleble in
J lckson . Good cash flow .
cloll 286-7019.
i
Money to Loan
Columbus F irs1 Mortgage
Co mpany FHA-VA Finan·
ci ng Loan Rep. Cookie
Krau11e r (3041675-3473 .
' .

t

Ha llmark, 3 bd r., m obile
home, furnished , under
pi nned, pa ti o, porc h incl ud ed. Call 388·9.469 after
5.
'
3 mobile homes on one lot.
40 Custer St., Middle port.
61.4·992·3318 or 614·992·2685
after 3 p .m .
1971 Darian 12 x 65, 3
be droom s. 1972 Crown
Haven, 14 x 65 with B x 10
ex pando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader 1-4 x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B IJ.o~ s
Sales, Inc . 2nd and Viand
Sts . Pt . Pleasant, WV.
Ph,one 675·4424 .

MOBILE home located in
Ca mp Conley, ext ra ni ce
and c lean, phone 30.4·895·
3967.
US E D MOBILE
576·2711 .

HOME .

1973 3 bedroom 1.4 x 70, un·
derp inned . 675·406-4.

./

Fish Tank and Pet Sh6p
2413 Jackson Ave., P1.
Pleaunt. 675-2063. Mon .,
Thurs., / Frl.11 to.S . Tues.,
Wed ., I Sot. 11 1o A. Chec k
our Fish Special.

2 bedroom home in M id·
dleport. Deposit requi r ed .
Call614·9'12·5914.

30'10.
TWO bedroom , furni shed
cotta g e a t 2103 Jeffer s on
Ave. De posi t required . 304·
675-4100, day .
2 HOU SES, 4 rooms each,
51. Rt. 87, 304-895·3879.
MT . Vernon Ave nue.
Duple x, 5 rooms &amp;
basement, Call : 304·675·
3030 or-675·3-431 ,
Mobile Homes
for Rent

42

3 bdr .. doubl e w ide, convenient locati on in City
lim its, fur nishe d, new car·
pet &amp; .drapery throughout,
all gas, all utilities paid
cept electr ic, no pets, no
more than 4, ref . &amp; dep,
re q. $350 per mo: call 446·
3547 .
2 bdr. mobil e home, total
electric, 2 1/ 2 miles past
Hol zers on 160, S175. Call
446·3533.
2 bdr. and 3 bdr . mob ile
homes. Call-446·0175.

APARTMENT for
Call-146· 0390.

Rent.

Nice 2 bdr. apt,, fUrnished ,
clean, Main St ., Chestllre.
References &amp; security dep.
Call245·5818.
1 ·bedroom apts. available
at Rivers ide Apts . Equal
"Opportunity Housing. Call
992·7721.
Available. 1 bec:lroom apt.
tor rent. Contact Village
Manor Apts., Middleport.
992-7787 .

2 bedroom furni s hed aPt
992·5434, 992-5914 or 304·8822566.
'h double house. 2 bedroom
fu r nished :
Depos i t
i'"equried . Adults preferred .
No pets . Call614·992·2749.

One and two bedroom apa r·
tments. Adults preferred ,
no pets, references. Inqulre
614·9'12-2878 before 6 p.m .
Apartments. 675 · 5~.
APARTMENT S, mobile
ho m e s ,
hou se s ,
Pt.
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614-446-8221 or 614-245-9484.
2 bedroom tw in s ingle in
Pt. Pleasant.at ~05 Poplar
Street . $200 mOnth plus
deposit. 1-614·263"8322 or
61&lt;-263-2669.
Effic iency rooms by fhe
week on Main Street,
Mason, wv. 773·5651.
Twin s ingl e, large room s
a nd yard. F't. Pleasant.
Depos it a!'ld references. 1·
614·263-8322 or 1-614·2632669.

-~

For Sale or Tradt

C~'~~~"''""" ._

r!=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l
51
Household GOOda
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, attaman, 3 tables, ssoo. Sofa,
c hair and loveseat, $275.
Sofas and "' chalrs priced
from 5285. to 5795. T abies,
$38 and up to 1109. Hlde·abeds,$340., queen size, S310.
Recliners, S175. to 5295.,
Lamps from S18. to 165. 5
pc, clife«es from S79., to
$315. 1 pc., SUI'/. and up.
Wood table with 4 chairs,
S219 up to U95.~Desk $110.
Hutches, 5300. and 5375.,
maple or p e finish.
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak, S67S., Basse11 Cherry,
$795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, 5250. and
up to $350. Captain' s bedS:,
1275. complete. Baby beds,
$99. Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, 558,,
firm, $68·. and S78. Queen
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests, U9.
4 dr. chests, U2. Bed
frames, S20 . an~ S25., 10 gun
- Gun cabinets, S350 .• dlnet·
te chairs 120. an~ 125. Gas
or electric ranges. S295. Or·
thopedic super firm. S95,
baby matresses, S25 &amp; $35,
bed frames $20, S25, &amp; SJO.
Used,
Ranges ,
refrigerators. and TV's,
3 miles out Bulavllle Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon .
thru Fri. , 9am to Spm, Sat,
446·0322

IN Middleport. 2 bedroom, Flrewood·spli1, del ivered
2 bdr. mobile home on furnished apartment, 1 and stacked. Ml xecl wood
$65 per cord or $35 per half
Roush Lane. Cheshire, new. small child, 1-304·882·2566.
corc:l. Hardwoocl $75 per
lot. CaU304·773· 5882,
Professional
23
IN Middle port. .2 room ef- cord or $.40 per half cord .
services
Call for quotes on large
I
Jus t a rrived - 2 used mobile 2 bdr. mob ile home on fici ency apartment, f-304· quanltles. Phone 245·.5478.
Piano 1unlng and repiiir,
private
lot.
Vinc
inity
of
882·2566.
homes, 2 and 3 bedrooms,
Love your ne ighbor tune
priced to sell , can be seen Bidwell, 5140 mo. plus 5100
your . Piano. Bill W•rd,
· 1 bedroom unfurn ished New WOOdburning ad·on
at
the former K and K dep. Ph. 388·8887.
wards Keyboard. ~- 4372.
Mobile Home Sal es. Now
apartme nt, adults only, furnance, still in factory
Gallipolis.
owned and operate d by ·o 2 bdr . 1raile r will be . located Gampotis F er ry. carton, heats Iaroe home,
SASO. Call250·1216.
a nd W E states .. 675-3000.
a vailable Nov . 7. Adults 675·1371 or 675·381 2.
HARPER Adult Cart Cen·
only, no pets, 322 Third
te r·provid ing the personal
Fiat Allis model 6E dozer
1966 12 x -45 New Moon of· Ave . Call .u6-3748 or 2.56·
care your elderly nMd in a
with
cargo wench, Flat
1903.
fi ce traile r , hot water
home like atmosphere.
Allis model 5.45 rubber tire
heater, ac, fuel oil furn ace,
~
~=FurnlS~]
R~ms
=_
Vac ancies now availible.
endloader 211.4 yd. bucket,
1 full ba1h . $3000. Ca ll 675· 2 bdr. trail e r for rent,"
call 304·675- 1293.
completely overhauled
SLEEPING
ROOMS
and
2600.
loc ated in city, ref .
light housekeeping ap t., w ith new engine, both
req uired. Call446· 379l.
Park Central Hotel.
items in exc . cond ition.
Mobile home roof paunting
1973 Grandev i lle 14 x 70, 3
Blaine King 304-312·6390,
and anchoring, D and W bedroom
mobile home, Ni ce 2bdr., home home in
e;sta1es. 675-3000.
Room &amp; board for gen- Ripley, WVA. ·
priced for quick sale. 304· c ity , adults, no pets. Call
tleman
. For light work on
882 ·3433.
446-0958.
farm . R e asonable . 742· More than 100 pieces of
2266.
brown underpinning for a
1972 12x65 Schultz, 3 Ni ce warm 2 bedroom,
- ........ i _ __
mobile home, used just one
bedroom, partially fur· ba th a nd a half, ex pando
year. A seven and one half
31 _____.H
-"o"'m
" "e 's'-'f"'o,_
r .:::
Sa, l"1 ___
nished, gas heat, rented lot. living room , ni ce pri va1e
feet by 58 inch wide oval
priced on inspection, 304· country lot. paved roads,
New 3 bdr . house with
rug, and white uniforms
Space for Rent
out building, pasture and 46
garage a nd fu l l basement 675·2907.
s ite 9·10. Call «6·3065 after
garden s pace . $175 per COUNTRY MOBILE Home 4 :30PM.
S45,000. Owne r will he lp
month P,lus depos it. Call
finance, Call4-46·0390.
Park , Route 33, North of
Lets &amp; Acreage
35
614-985-4351.
Pomeroy , Large lots. Call For Sale: 750 and 1000
...:.......----~
992-7479.
BY OWNER : 4 bdr., 'Pii t· Would you like 'to own a
. gallon PLASTIC septic
. level. living room &amp; din ing home of your own. We 2 bedroom furn is hed. Off
tanks. State and County apdidn'
t
have
$10,000
tor
a
Rt . 7, Pomeroy . 5190 plus
room comb ina tion, eat ·i n
proved . Total weight 300
kitche n, lg . fam ily rm., 2 down payment nor $5,000 utilities, lawn care. SlSO
_,
'·
lbs., Haul In your pick-up
112 baths, located in Ta ra nor eve n $1.000. Do what we de posit. Available Nov. 11 ,
1ruck. Ron Evans Backhoe
1981. 614-'185-3949.
E s1a tes , Club house a nd d id Ca ll513·592·9175.
Se rvice, located 3' mites
pool p r ivile ges , S75,000
South of Jackson on St. R.t.
51
Household Goods
f irm. Kyger Creek School
93. 286-5930.
BY owne r, 3 apartment TWO bedroom mobile
District. Shown by appt. house on approx . 1 a cr e. home in Mas on, adul1s
USED. REFRIGERATOR;
.only ca\1446·9403 .
Li ve in one, rent o1hers to only , no pets, 304-675·1452.
electric rllnge, as is ; dine1· Firewood for sale, mi)(ed
make your pay merit . Can
te set, 4 chaff's .. Corbin and hard woods, delivered arid
be converted single home. TWO bedroom, furni shed,
Srwd~r
Furniture. 955 stacked. Call245-9264.
FOR SAL E BY OWNER
Cit y water, will consider SlSO. monthly plus utilities,
Second, Gallipolis. Call-446·
LOC'~ h:! d in Bidwell, Oh.· 3
bdr'. home. over si ze land cont ra c t . 675· 1883 9-5 water pa id. Gle nwood, 304- 1171.
Water pump, trailer hitCh.
garage 2 1/2 ca r and 2 l / -4 p.m .
576·2441 or 576·9073.
Call
446·2599.
ac r e-s. Make offer. 61-4·-4«·
Rodge r 's Trading Post 92
1 59~ or 443·3250.
Olive St ., Ga llipolis. Open
ONE bedr oom , adults only,
9·5, 6 days a week. Fur- Firewood for sale . All har·
furni s hed , you pay utili ties.
niture, appliances, an · dwood . $35 pick up load,
For sale by owner, 50 ac res 41
Houses lor Rent
304-675-2535.
stac~ed and delivered. Call
and 1 3 bdr. home , small . "--~'-""""-'~~~­
tlques. Sell , buy, &amp; trade.
446-9607 or 2&lt;15-5506.
cash down, a ss um e low in·, 4 bdr . 2 1/2 ba1h bl level
terdst mortga ge. Call 256· wi1h pool off R1. 35. Call TWO bedroom frai ler, 30.4·
QUEEN
size early
Wise man Real Estate 67S·4088.
936:t:
American hide· a· bed, prac· Sean wood &amp;- coal heater,
Agency. 446·3643.
ti cally new, $150. 304-675- 1250. Call256· ~ 7.
2 bedroom mobile home.
23'16.
4 befr. house with garage,
Riding lawr ·nwer, t1 ·H·
pool, pool house, family FOR LEASE OR RENT· fl.ll'"nl s hed or unfu rnished.
Camp Cpntey . 675s
Ilk
c. 2••
room .
2 ba t hs , f ull Modern 3 bd r . ranc h near located
1371 or675·3912 .
GOLD
v e lvet
swivel
• enew . io I JQ-6«)9 ,
basement. near HMC, mid town. 5300 per month,
rocker, S50. 882·2549.
570,000. call446-8563.
drequi
e posit
Pool &amp;table
top,
r ed . &amp;Call reference~
. STROUT ~-------...::J..:::=======~ cues
pool solid
balls slate
Included.
REALTY 446·0008.
Call 446·4347 weekdays of3 bdr., 2 bath, LR with
fireplace, faml ly room with
They'll Do It Ever_y Time
ter 5.
Woott burner , kitchen &amp; w e will be hav ing several
d in ii1g room, city schools, homes for rent, lease or
12 HP Wisconsin 1 cylinder ·
tease with option to buy
446·2003 before 1:00.
engine with hydraulic
~7HI!~
within the next few weeks.
pump. Ideal for wood spill·
U!fl/lfJICS·· 7AEYter, S200. Call - . . 8 In
3 be droom house, 2 1cres, 2 All over S200 per mo. &amp;
~0117R1$­
morning, 245·5535.
baths, family room. Full required references &amp;
t!I6T SIOit.s:&gt; /
basement, oaraoe. 949- deposits. For more Information call Strout
2079.
Halley's Gun &amp; Dog SupReally 446-0001.
plies . . L.R .R., Gallipolis,
Ohio. Just below Raccoon
Of rent-3 bedroom fur·
nished home on BuG Chat· 3 bdr. house, 2 baths, fully
Brldlll! on State. Rt. 7. Ph.
256-6551 . Open evenings
ti n Road on big level lot. c arpeted, $300 plus deposit,
35 Chillicothe Rd ., no pets.
5PM to 9PM. Thll Week
&lt;76-2711 .
Call4-16-374 or 256-1903.
blraelll's on hiRitlng sup110USE·Meadowbr"'* Ad·
cJit ion. 3 'bedroom, f1muv
room with fireplace, c~n ·
' ral air, basement. JOH75·
1542.
~ A-NDHILL

Roall, Pf .
, leasant, 3 bedl
A 1112
'1•ths, double t• &amp;le..
lwner will f i n - 1m·
&lt;nedlale OCCUI*ICY· :104·
675·5817.
3 bedroom older home, approx . .. acrn, 10 mn• from
town. PIIOM 67H8P7.

a. •-·~
n.....
.,, gune. v,....,
~ ues., Wed.
a. Thura. PAM
Ilea

to PPM. Guaranteed rebuilt
coon beami-S69.95, rebuilt
dynollghts·U,95,
Used
whNt lights
chgel
•guaranteed', kt"' a1 Spor·
ts 25 per cent high
proleln-119.00 par hundr. 21
per cent - -111.110 par
hundr. •••Inc.

a.

Unfurnished house for rent,
1 bdr., 1160 mo., dtp.
required, no utilities plld,
no pets. 57 Olivo 51. l'hont
446· 7886.

Improvements

!I'I!NING

STANLE!Y STEEMER
carpet Cleaning
416--4201

7:00

'

-•"

'

" " '~
'

'""lc____:Fc:a=rm,_,E"'q"'u'-'ip,_me:•:en,_t_
~
Early model Gravely tractor with mower for sale,
S'IOO. Call4-16-1570.
Tray bilt composter roto
tiller, 6 horse. e&gt;cc. cond.
Call388·9093 after 5.
63

Locust Posts . 992·6102.

Young Tom Turke y' s. Call
-1-16·9807 after &lt;PM .

26' TROUTWOOD travel
toiler and camp site on
~accon Creek . Close to
Ohio . River. $500 down.
owner will finance. 614-2561216.
Disc'o ntlnued cabinets, top,
stove, hood, sink. 51200.
Dale's Kitchen Center. 675·
2318.

Llves1ock

REGISTERED
Polled
Hereford bull, gentle, 304675·2347.
Two stock cows, will
freshen In early spring.
One 2 year old Slmmental
bull. Call 773-5770 after 5
pm .

. ............. "
. . .O.W

10 speed boys bike, 26 inch
girls bike with baby
carriage, good condition.
675-7148.

71

o.o

o o .o.. .. H '

Auto lor Sale

79 Z-28 Camaro , 32,000
tnll es, good cond. Ask'lng
$5,500. Call379·2400.

Oil stove with thermostat
and blowers, 2 years old.
$100. 675-7142.
.1976 Fiat, 4 dr., 5 spd ., AM·
FM rad io, good cond.,
AM· FM stereo with turn· $1,300 . Call 367-0405 after
table, 8-track. 2 speakers, SPM.
S1.40. Kodal&lt;. instamatic SlO.
Bedroom suite. 304·773· 197.4 Buick limited , $1,000.
550S.
Call4-16-7247 .

KING model 9901 B coal &amp;
wood burner with blower &amp;

shaker grate, used 1 year.
304-4511-1806.
NEW Uniroyal r~dial steel
belted tire, mounted on
new r im , size 195-70R ·13" .
Maytag autom•tlc washer,
works, $30.00. TV, 21 " as Is
$10. 304-67S-1316.
BROWNIE outfit, jumper,
blouse, complete. Size 10.
$1S. Phone 304-675-1714.
LUMP c oal $45. ton
delivered. Firewood $30 .
1on del ivered. 30•·675·7199 .

1975 Mustang PS, PB. au1o.
Call245- ~9.

1979 Dodge Omni 02.C auto.,
p.s., p.b., rear defroster,
am·fm cassette, like new.
$3,800. 742·3154or992· 7467.
MORRISON'S. Auto sales.
Henderson, WV . Phone 675157&lt; or 675-2881.
81 DODGE colt, less than
3,0110 miles, must sell , 40
mpg plus,· 304-675· 2343 or
675·2834 .

79 PONTIAC Sunbird, &lt;eyl ,

4 speed, tilt wheel , radials,
. 19,800 miles, exceptionally
Rabbits, ml•ed breeds. c lean, ss .. ooo. phone JOA-675Fry size. 10 weeks old , 6438.
$3.00. 576·2725. .
'-- ---~-

Four 14 inch Cragar wheels
1o fit Chevrolet . Two 13 inch mud and snow tires. M l
Military Rifle 30-06 $100 .
Call895-3638.
Used tires , Hanshaw's,
Lucas Lane Road. 675-7360.
David Brown tractor. 990
diesel, S1900. Sears gas
wall furnace, 75,000 BTU .
$150. 6~5-2283 .

Hotpolnt
stove,
needs new element $20. 61S·
7632 .

6 Inch Sandstone
Fluestarter. Four tires and
wlleels for 67 Cutlass. 67S1198.

71 CHEVROLET Caprice,
one owner,· clean, PS, P!,
V·8. Mar(orie Grueser, 304·
675-4207 .
72

Trucks for Sale

1971 pickup truck. First
ssoo gets 11. 675-1302.
1979 CHEVY Custom ,
Deluxe 10 pickup, 1111 bed ,
28,000 miles, 2.4 mPQ, e xcellent condition, 30.4·6756813.

73

Vano&amp;4W.D.

77 Chevy 4x4 ~heyenne 20
needl some work. See at
105 Cedar St., Galllpollo.
Botween now&amp;6PM.

One

Oak Firewood S35 truck
load. Call675-1828.
55

Building Supptln

'

Building materials, block,
brick, seWer pipes, win·
dows, llntela, etc. Claude
Winters, A io Grande, 0.
Call2&lt;15-5121 .
3X6 picture windoW with
screens, $35 , Trlpte·track
storm windows 28x.C6,
115.00 Cell 367-11491 Kyger,
Oh io.
56 .

Pets lor S.lo

POODL~

GROOMING .
Cell Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.
DRAGONWYND
CAT TERY · KI!NNI!L . AKC
black Chow puppies, CFA
Himalayan, Penlan and
Slam- klltena. Call 446·
-·· ~
-~-"-:":::-:
.r:-4-p_.m_._ _ _ __

1 HILLCREST

kENNEl.
Boarding all brwds, cleen
llldoM-out- flcllltln.
Alto AKC lleg, Dober·
ma... C•ll 441-7795.
·

1978 Subaru 4WD station
wagon, body and eng ine
need wqrk ; 4WD clrive
works e&gt;eellent. $1,575.
cosh or might toke trac1or,
gr'evely or truck In on trade
. ln. 614·9'12·7247, osk for
Fred.
BRONCO, sharp, 304895-3550, ask for Tony .

I'M A RePORTeR. WHAT
I'M INTe~~TcD IN I~

198!" RM ·125 Suzuki, 11!0,
cond. 1911 LeeNN
motor cycle trailer, 1300,
ex. cond. Call675-6367.

ox.

•

MACNI!IL-ut!HMR

(Jll

.

C1J CAROL BURN!TT AND
PfiiiNDI

Oueet:

Joanntl

Woodward.
7::10 ~- YOU AIK!D FOil IT
ANOTH!RUFE
.(I) FAMILY F!UD
LAV!RN! AND SHIRLEY
AND COMPANY
(I)
illaHTLY IIUIINEII
REPORT
CIDI
RICHARO 8 1 - S
&amp;HOW
®MOVIE · (DRAM AI"•
"WinterHt'" 1831

~..I'LL eer 'tllJ A c:J.lel,K,., I :"'I

,.,WOOLD 'tbU,L.II&lt;e I*)

~~~lt.l ~'(-~-'btl-00!

~~~""IAAT~

li.

•·

OMioaoriOOidi-,IOtorm
"tout Ol&lt;llnary -

I ()

I ENDUC
I t)

IL-..1..-1
TRACCI j
_j_
l _.c:.(..A-.-!_1
INf~A(~

K]

.

.I

'r :.

=~=-=.:~~·:~~

Prlnranswerhere:""'("""I,.....,I,......,J KI I
Veslerday s

'

.

I

(MOWOflllomonOW) ".

Jumbles: TONIC FLORA BESIDE MOTION
Answer: Might go to the head at a stag party -:ANT~ERS

.

NATIONAL QEOORAPHIC
SPECIAL
C!JMOVIE · (DRAMAI"
"Buahldo Blede" 1080
(I) Clll •
HAPPY DAYS
Jealouay wr«~oeka havoc when
Roger and F onzle date the
aameglrl.
• (I) ClDI THE BUDS BUNNY
THANKBQIVINQ DIET Bugo
Bunny eeu hlmealf up u Dr.
Bunny and diapeneee advice

ANNIE

and carrotato hla WarnarBroa.

-YOU I'IOWT BE 5/IFE
STAYIM' HERE

frlendalllho are atrlcken with
anxiety over the Qaatronomlc
temptation a of the upc oming

III'A6T, YE WIITE!lW66EP BIUiE lllfml.'

YltTH

holiday. (Roputl
CJ) COSMOS 'Backbone of
Night' Eumlnlng the evolution'
ofhumanthoughtaboutthe
heavana, thiaeplaDda .. kathe
question : ' What are the itara
and how f•r away are they1' ·
(CI oaed ·Capllone d ; ~ . S . A.)

Tt10SE 'IIHALER6
ftUNNIN' LOOSE,

Call -146-2801 for termite,
roach. bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control . Free
estimates, B iII Thomas.

CAP'H JAC It!

A &amp; c Home Insulation,
Inc. No Job to small or
large. 2 vrs. e)(perience &amp;
1raining.' Work guara'n·
tee~! Save up to 30 to 50 per
cent on heating bills . Free
estimates. Call 286-7171 or

(60mlna.)

8:06 (I) N~IABKETBALL Mlonlo
Hawk a va Milwaukee Buck a
8:30 (I) llJie LAY!RNE AND
IHIRL!Y Laverne and Shirley
d9uble date with two younger
men and letthemaelvaa in for a
new aort of trouble.
• (I) ClDI SPECIAL MOVIE
PR!S!NTATION "10" 1979
Stare: Dud~ey Moo re , Julia

2~· 5740.

GENES
CARPET
Cleaning. Special r~tes for
Nov. and Dec . only. Call
now and save. 614-Y92-6309.

A.ndrewa.
8:18 Cll CBNUPDAT! NEWS
9 :00 C1J. Cil ULTRA QUIZ Don
RowanandOich Martin hoatthia
special where the conteatanta.
aa long aa they win , travat
around the world eompetlngln

LOCKSMITH
Servic e.
Residential, automotive.
Emergency service. ' Cawl
882-2079.

CIJllJieTHREE'SCOMPANY
Jack feedalanythe Uneawhen
the would.-be Rcmao finally
ueta ada te with hla Ia teat '
tnt8tuatlon, Terrv .
C1J ()D ODYSS!Y "Mylho and

F &amp; I:&lt; 1Tree Trimming,
stump removal . 675·1331 .

RINGLES'SSERVICE ex- .
perienced mason, rooter,
carpenter , etectr iclan.
general repairs and
remodeling. Phone 304-675·

theMoundbuildera 'OOYSSEY

e xp loree the huge earthen
moun daaeattarad tl't rougho ut
the central United Stataa that
were onc e believed to have
baanbul ltbya 'loat' civlllzatlon .
( QI.oud -Captlonad;U. S.A.)

Oownacrost
th' ol' bric:lqe,,

2088 or 67~4560.

what mean'
Rufus jes'
fix!

Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps ·Sales and. Service .- .
304-895·3802 . .

(60mln&gt;,l
8:30 (I) llJie TOO CLOSE FOR .
COIIF011T
10:00 (]). Cil FLAMINGO ROAD
LuU · Maale phya l celly
attacked by the emot1011111y
dlaturbed aon ola prominent
f1Jmily , but when aha preaaea
chargee ahalearna that Stterlft
Sample ia attempting a cover

Slark's tree trlmmirig and
removal. Insured . Phone
S76·2010.
Experienced carpenter
available tor home or
business remodeling or
new structures .
Free
estimates . References .

~· (60mtna.)

!,....

(!)MOYIE · (COMEDY! ••
11 Prlvata
1080
(I) llJie HART TO HART
Jonathan acramblaato protect
hla wife when two high aoclely

675-2440.

HDMEBUI LDING· Compl·
ete housebullding services
from foundation to roof
Local builder with besi
references will build to ._ny
stage or complete job . Also
room additions and
remodeling. Call H. s.
Roc Ievitch. 304-576-2730.

WINNIE 'S

'

SEEN

AWAY FF!OM
HE'R: t&gt;ESK A

'

lOT LATELY.. ,
TAKING CAF!E
OF CONNIE AT
HOME,, ANP

;

'

1;;;2;===;,P;;;I;u::;
:: m:;:b~ln='a:===

I'M

ladiea who modeled luxurious
furs with Jennlter for an
advertilingcampelgnaretound
murdered. (80 mlna.) (Cioaed·
Captioned ; U.S.A.)
()) FiRING LINE 'Ia Thera an
Ana war to M•lthua1' Gue1t :
Pr o taaaor Julian Simon,
proteaaor of Econ omica,
University of lllinoia; author of
'The Uhimate Raaourc e' . Hoat:
Wltllam F. Buc kley , Jr.. (80

OH·OH/ THI5 CfffTAINI.Yi
ISN'T THE TIM!! TO
TELL HER AEJOUT THE
tSIRL WE H1Rfl7 DOWN
AT THE

SHOP.

5TARTINC5

TORE'SENT

&amp; Heallnp

min a.)
()D NEWS

IT.

•,

CARTER'S PLUMBING :
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 416· 4477

10:20 C1J TBB EVENING N!WS
10:28 (I) CBHUPDAT!NIWB
10::10 (I) SINQOIJT AMERICA
()D
ALFRED HITCHCOCK
PRESENTS.
10:81 C1J cat! UPDATl! NI!WI
11:oo Clle (I)
CIDillJia
NEWS
CllllASHYILU! RFO
Cfl DOCTOR IN TH! HOUI!
11 ,os C1J ALL IN THE F AIIIL Y
1 1:28 (I) CBN UPDATI! N!WI
11':10 ~THITONIG!'fTSHOW

'

Exc•vating

m• CIJ

BACKHOE and Septic lank
Service , Larry Slden ·
Stricker. 675·5580.

.,

I GOT TO FIGGER
OUT SOME WAY
FOR PAW TO GIT
A LITTLE
EXERCISE

- Eiedrlcot

Retrigeration

Gueat1: David Niven , Barbara
ndrell. (80 mine.)

ffi

ANOTHIRUP!
A!MEMBfR WHEN: THE
BIRDS ANO THI UES Thja
exclualva HBO 1eclaa contln·
uea with an exlmlnatlon ol the
hlatocy ol moraltly , lrom the
rlgon,ol Puritan tthlca to th•

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
N . air condition service,
commercial, Industrial .
Phone 882-2079.

IS

By Oswald Jocoby
aad Alaa SoDIIJ

'·,
NORTH
+QJ 7

North was bitter about the
wbole thing. He complained
that he should have never
raised bls partner's heart
openin&amp; bid with 4-3-3-3 distribution and stoppers In aU

ll·lU

•atz
t AJ 10
.... 43

suits.
North was right from a
result standpoint. Playllll In
no-tn1mp, he would have
made four or live odd. Playing In hearlll South leU short
ofllls game contract.
We do sympathize with
North but can assure bim
that year In and year out it
Is far better to raise hearlll
with his hand than to try to
find a magic no-trump.
It took a lot of bad luck
~: some fine defense lor
t and :Nest to beat four
hearts.
·
Actually, the line defense
wasn't difficult. West Dpe!led
bls deuce of spades. East
took his ace and returned the
10. Tbls was a lllllt preference aiJIIAI to ul: lor a diamond return. So West ruffed
and dutifully led back a
diamond.
South's goose was cooked
to a tnal&lt;!. Ho COOIId clo no

+z

WI!ST

EAST
+AIIUU . '

....
+tal!%
88
+Jt087

·tK75
-· ··
+985%

.

.

SOVTH
+KU
'IQII7it

tQI

+KQ
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Wttl

Nor!~

Eul

P-

Sf

Pau

Pass

Pass

Pass

s..
••

Openlnslead:

•• •

'J

+2

.''
'

'

better than take and lose the ··
lineae. West got IID()ther .
spade ruff and bls ace of
-lrllmPI for down two.

6i~lf.. 10t,(

..

·~~

'

'-~

bp THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

39 poisonlng

1 With 37

Down, _

40 JFK called

" Sesanle! u

it an orphan
41- fixe

sayer

DOWN
1 Breakfast

5 Optionally
11 Starch

(comb. form)

favorite

z

Titillated
3Whereby

12 Achieve
success
13 Teen's

Yesterday'• Alulwor

4 Drink
5Smoothed 10 Kind of

favorite

along
6 In high
dudgeon
7Solll
syllable
8 Was the

adjective
14 Burned
15 Kirghlz,
U.S.S.R. city
II Showed
the way
f7 Suffix

boss
90ne

for persist

Z8Main
arteries

gtass
II Church

30 Principle

"
.'·''
....
_ ,,
::: '

31 Aptly named
lle&amp;SOII
19 Singer Ross
author
'•

20 With a chill
24 On one's

33 Dickens'
Dartle

guard

38 Make a

37 See

%5 Exchanged

balancing %t Troops' spirit

18 Required
20 Idea

'•

,.

bow' ._.
.

.,

I Across

~ (comb.

.,
'.

.•

form)
ZJ "The Curse"

2Z Fish
Z3 "Heater"
24 Gain
Z5 Fed. agts.
27 Joe Tynan
in the movie
%9 - Barrett
3G Strive

32 Curve part
33 Klng (Sp.)
34 Choler
35 Ohio city
37 Greek river
38Kay

e!Il CIILA TIIIOYI! Allot :

'The Dilemma' Alice II
aurprlaadwh•n•noldbeaufrom
New Jaraey a howe up In
Phoenix, ready to pick up their
romance whe,. It ltH off yea,.
before. (Repeat) McCloud:
'Thla Muet Be Tht Alamo' Tha

PE,\NUTS

NOW HAULING house coel
&amp; limestone tor drl,_ovs

...

Thompoon

brainchild

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR

it :;·.~ .~

...,.-

!1 LONGFEl-LOW

.

'

''Thlltel........ 1. .

. . . . 1-

Cllle AIC NIWINIGHTLIIII!
Ariohorodby Tod Kopptf.

CRYPTOQUOTBS
ZB

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LKEWC
VEZTGWN,

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AIC NIWI NIQHTLINE

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11:31 CIJMCMI~VIINTUIIII•IO.

12100

·.·

One letter oimply tilands lor another. In thil sample A Is
uaed for the th.-.e L 's, X for the two O's, elc. Sin11e letters,
1poatrophea, the Jenlth and form1Uon of the words arc all ·
hints. Each day tht code leiters aro d(trerenl.

a ,nersu oriel a h1mpen
McCloud and Broadh•ralln
their effort a to aolva 1
niOkol-'o murdor. (llepeoO
CIJ AICCA,_D HWI
i!IIMOYI! -(COMIDYI••• \i

'

'

relaxed lttltudea of today.

Gener•l Hauling

Upl!olt!!rt

....

North: bitter and right

C1J IINNY HtU 8HOW

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367-7471 or
367·0591 .

17

BRIDGE

mentally and phyalcally

demanding game a . The
champlonwillwin$1 00,000 and.
a peraonaUzed 'tantaay' prize.
(Part one of i. two - part
Q!_eaentatlon; eo mini ,)
(1) 700CLUB

RON ' S Television Service.
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576-2398
or 446·2454.

&amp;

.·

C1J

FERRELL ' s
WI NOON
GLASS SERVICE HOme
maintalnance
and
remodel Jng. Phone 388·
9326.
French City
Painting
Residential , commercial,
interior, exterior, paper
hanging, and texured .
ceilings. Ph. 367-77S.C or 3677160.

I

lngto baa clergyman. (80 mlna.)
(_g_loaed·Captloned; U.S.A.)

.T RISTATE
UPHOLSTI!RY S!tOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis
416-7133or4-16-1133.
. ·

(

,,.

-toUr;...-. -

I!NTI!11TAINMENT
TONIGHT
,
IIAN,ORD AND SON
7:31
7:18
CINUPDATI!NI!WS
8 :00
.(I) PATHERIIURPHYA
newly ordained prleat ari'ivatal
.the Gold Hill orphanage and 11
furloua when he learna I hal
Father Murphy Ia onfy pretend·

4

C•ll for estimates 367-7101. ·

AllloPirll
&amp;Acclloorles

HAPPYDAYSACIAIN

C1J TICTACDOUGH .

J01nBaty.

7101

BING'S CONCRETE CON STRUCTION • Specializing
in concrete driveways,
sidewalks ,
patio ,
basement, garage floors
and etc. Free estimates. 11
years experience. Call 3677891-.

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Au1horized Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. '1'12-2214.

1975 Honda XL 100 1re11 or
11rHI, low mileage, gOOd
cOnd., $400. Call446·1495.

~

Clll •

1972 Volkswagen Bus. 88231&lt;15.

For sale 197A Honda 554,
low milage, extras, exc.
cond ., 1&amp;50. Call446-0014.

ANKIRKRG

CIDI N!WS.
CIII.MUPI'ET8HOWOUHI:

MY OWN I!IU51NeS5.

PAINTING · interior and
e xter i or , plumbing ,
roofing, some remodeling.
20yrs. e•p. Calll88·9652 .

14

Motorcycles

JOHN

ll!PORT

WEATHERALL CON ·
CRETE - quality and service , call675-1582 .

1980 Chevy scotsdale 3 /4
lon, 4· whe&amp;l drive, 4 spd .,
power steering, 28,000, g.c.,
S7,000. CaiiJOof-773-5150.

74

C1J

i

CAP!'AIN EASY

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Call416·2107.

13

J9

CIJe PMIIIAGAziNI

Iff''*
. !NTI!liTAttiiii!NT
TONIGHT
.

JIM MARCUM Roofing ·
spouting and siding. 30
years experience . Free
estlm•tes . Remodeling .
Call 388-9857.

1 rm. house In town.
Inquire at 918 2nd. Ave.,
GIIIIP.OIII. No phone calli.

(

,•

-.w

Firewood split &amp; delivered.
535. truck load, or $65, a
cord. Call 614·843·2933 or
614-843-2452 . .

.~~~~~oo~s~~~~n~ee~d~s
new
Also

-----------

For sale or rent. Lovely 3
bdr. house in country setting .
Convenient . to
Gallipolis or Rio Grande.
216-734-3734, evenings.

Lump coal $45 for deliver.
Firewood SJO T delivered.
Call379·2617 .

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

1978 Plymouth Volaire, 6
cyl. Call379-2n6.

Misc. Merchilndlce

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

For sale firewood . Split,
stacked and delivered. 530
a iarge pickup load, Call
446·8535 or 446·7993.

Oak Fire wood. Call 675·
2757 after 4 pm.

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES · washers,
dryers,
refrigerators ,
rang e s .
Sk a gg s
Ap ·
pl!ances, 1918 Eastern
Ave ., 4.46·7398.

54

MOdeiU, Winchester 30-30
ri I e
lever
ac II on
w/ 'carrying case. Like new.
Call446·1950 after 5PM.

family room, 1 3/.C b!th, 2
New garage,
3 bedroom
car
centralhouse,
heat
and air. Good location near
hospital In Sunklst Subdivis ion. Call-1-16·3617.

uJJ

.

•'

,.
Y)I)N}ID;t ' ~TIIATIC'I'-IDWOIIDGAMF
~ ~~·
bi'-Amoldondlob t. .. ,

TUI!IOAY
NOY. tO, 11181

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings, com, mercia I and residential,
. CORN $2 .75 bushei," JO.l-675- free estimates. Cell 2562786.
1182.

1977 Victoria n 1.4 x 70 two
bedroom , family room , all
e lect ric. ~ C a ll 675-3987 or
67.5·386'2 .

----

Television
•
•
VIeWing

Frul1
&amp; Vegetables

s mall furni s hed hc;m se,
adul1s only . Cal l -146·0338.
Furnished upsta irs apt. 3
rms., and bath, adul ts only,
no pets. clean. Call 446·
1519:

•

Home

2 POOdle puppies. 6 ' wt&lt;s.
old. l black, I sliver. Coli
alttr 4, 416·9219 .

I

For rent 104 4th Ave. Sma ll
1960 Elcan completely fur · 2 bd r. , no more fha n 2
property coverages are
· h d 2 bd $3 500 c 1 adults. Ca ll446·2957.
" 15 e '
r ., '
· al
a vai la ble to meet
446
(:onllac1' I
· 2024· ·
d iv idual needs.
- - - -- - - - - 2 mobile homes, 2 bdi-.• one '
Neil Ins. Agency,
double wide, one house.
Hond
a
250
XL,
500
1980
Phone 446·1694. ·
mi les, $800. Phone 446·1203. ~all675 · 3000 or -1-16·0682.

- ------- -·----

Have 3 male Cocker
Spaniel s to breed. 2 blonde,
1 red, gqocl blOOd tine, AKC
retls tered. 446-93n after
5:30PM .

.·

DJCXTRACY .

OU.IIIy Aoll I I 'V &amp; " Paint
·work. lnaurance work
welcome . sunroofl in·
otallod fnm t200-1230. Auto
Trim Center, 416-1961.

Yeotenlay'o cryptoqaote: MOST OF OUR
ARE MORE SUPI'ORTABlE -THAN 11IE
OUR FRIENDS ON.THEM .-C.C.COL'J'ON

.

'
MisFORTUNES .,,,.

OOMMENTS

OF· , ..

�2-The

Sentinel

•

Union supports compromise
WASHINGTON (AP) - A key
panel of the United Mine Workers
union says it conditionally supports
compromise legislation for a special
coal industry tax aimed at rescuing .
the black lung disability . benefits
program from its deepening fina ncial hole.
Under the compromise legislation,
the Reagan administration would
impose a special tax that would ex·
pire no later than 1995.
ActOrding to a Labor Department
·report to the House Ways and
Means' oversight subconunittee, the
fund's deficit could reach $!1 billion
by !995 unless action is taken. At the
end of fiscal!981 the deficit was $1.2
billion.
Meeting over the past weekend,
the 18-member International
Executive Board of the UMW voted

cent of the Illes price, whichever ia
less.
Under the compl'OIIIIJe legislation,
the admlniatration would add the
temporary IJIIOCiai tu, ra1alng the
ratea to $1 a ton for underground
coal and 50 cents for surface coal, or
4 percent of the Illes price - but
oniy until the deficit iB ellmlnated or
untll1995, whichever comes firllt.
After the compromise was an-

unanlmoualy to approv'e the compromise plan under certain con·
ditions, said Eldon Callen,
spokesman for the 160,00Cknember
union.
The union will back the plan if the
version enacted does not vary from
the one proposed ·and if government
regulations aimed at implementing
it can be reopened for review were
there such a change, Callen said
Monday.
The Reagan administration had
proposed in mld.()ctober to double
the so-called coal industry severance lax, which funds the black lung
program, and to tighten eliglbllty
rules for future claimants In an ef·
fort to stem the growing deficits.
The current tax iB 50 cents per ton
for underground coal and 2S cents
per ton for surface coal - or 2 per·

Second countdown
to begin today
Tuesday, November 10, 1981
CAPECANAVERAL,Fia. (AP)An abbreviated, 47~hour count-

down aiming for a fiery encore liftoff
of the ,jpace shuttle Columbia beglna
today, and officials hope the clock
ticks at least 31 seconds longer than

Wreck injures .driver
A teenage driver was slightly In·
jured In a one-car crash in Gallia
County Monday afternoon, according to. the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the slate highway patrol.
Angela Saunders, 17, Rt. 2, Crown
City, was not immediately treated.
The patrol said Saunders was
southbound on Cargo Road, two
miles west of Rt. 7, at 12 :10 p.m.
when her vehicle lost control on
gravel, went off the left side of the
road ans truck a tree. The car was
moderately damaged.
Troopers cited a driver in a tw&lt;&gt;car accident in Meigs County Mon·
day night.
According to the report, a vehicle
driven by Elva P. Haye, 50, Rutland,
was unable to stop on Rt. 7, tw&lt;&gt;tenths of a mile north of County Rd.
345, at 6:32p.m. and struck the rear
of a slowed vehicle driven by Leslie
J. Sheets,26,Pomeroy.
Sheets was waiting for an on·
coming vehicle when the crash happened. Sheeis' vehicle was severely
damaged while Haye's pickup truck
suffered slight damage. Haye was
cited for assured clear distance.
The patrol said a car driven by
Diana L. Jenkins, 19, Rt. I, Northup,
pulled from U.S. 35, four-tenths of a

mile east of Rt. 160, at 2:35 p.m.
Monday and coUided with a west·
bound car driven by Nancy L. Hubbard, ·48, Rt. 4, Oak Hill.
The report said Jeilltins attempted
to change lanes into the right lane
when the accident occurred. There
was slight damage to both autos and
no citation.
Charlene M. Darst, 48, Rt. 1,
Cheshire, was driving westbound on
Rt. 554, tw&lt;&gt;-tenths of a mile west of
Galli a County Rd. 4 at 1:30 p.m.
Monday when her auto went off the
left side of the road and struck a dit·
ch, causing slight damage and no in·
jury to the driver.
Two deer accidents were checked
into by the patrol Monday.
The report said Elizabeth A.
Strong, 16, Rio Grande, was southbound on Rt. 160, tw&lt;&gt;-tenths of a
mile south of U.S. 35, at 12:20 a.m.
when a deer ran into the road and
her vehicle struck and killed the
animal. Slight damage was reported ,
to Strong's car.
Eugene B. Long, 45, Rt. I, Long
Bottom, was driving westbound on
Olive Twp. Rd. 61 in Meigs Couqty at
3:15p.m. when a deer was killed af·
ter running into tbe path of his car
and striking the vehicle, causing no
reported damage.

last week.

Work crewa early today prepared
the launch pad for the 6 a.m. EST
"caD to stations" that atarts the
countdown clock. At the first tick,
liquid hydrogen and liquid ol'ygen iB
to flow Into the ship's electricity·
generating fuel cells.
The shuttle came to within 31
seconds of liftoff Nov. 4, only to be
derailed by clogged filters In two of
its three auxiliary power units.
Thursciay's second attempt at .a
launch iB seheduled for 7:30 a.m. It
would be the first time a spacecraft
made a repeat trip to space. The first flight was In April.
The units have been cleaned, the
spacecraft checked, and astronauts
Joe Engle and Hi'chard Truly are
ready to try 1111ain to pilot the first
ship slated to make a repeat voy1111e
Into orbit. Their job is to prove that
Columbia is indeed a reusable
vehicle and advance it another step
toward operational missions.
The astronauts were to fly to Cape
Canaveral later today from their
training base at the Johnson Space
Center In Houston. Truly conaidel'!l it
a good omen that the launch has
been rescheduled for Thursday, his
44th birthday.
"It will be the greatest birthday

Meigs County happenings ...
Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted-Edward Templeton ,
Pomeroy; Enna Yoho, Pomeroy;

Nellie Price, Middleport ; Florence
Musser, Pomeroy; Lewis Ellis, Mid·
dleport; Charlotte VanMeter, Reed·
sville.
Discharged--Pamela Granen,
Debbie Pridemore, Keith Aeiker,
Pauline Derenberger, Carl Autherson.

Squad answers
five calls Monday

(

Five emergency calls were an, swered by local units Monday, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reports.
The Rutland Unit at 11:34 a.m.
took Donald Binn from Meigs Mine 1
to O'Bleness Hospital ; at 6:02 p.m.
took Roger Wallace from Meigs
Mine 2 to Pleasant Valley Hospital
and at 6:06 took Charles Breakinon
from Meigs Mine 2to Holzer Medical
Center; Pomeroy at 12:32 p.m. took
Florence Musser from Route 143 to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and the
Middleport Unit at 11:02 a.m. took
Nellie Price from N. Second Ave., to
Veterans. Memorial.

.Coon hunters to
hold special meet
I

The Meigs County Coon Hunters
wiD meet in special session Friday,
Nov.l3, at'7 p.m. onSnowhall HiD.
Dues for 1982 will be collected and
a 'Thanksgiving dinner will be ser·
ved.

Not Chester man
The Mark Hall, no address recor·

ded, who appeared In Meigs County
Court last WednesdaY on petty theft
charges, was not Mark Hall of
Chester.

Dissolve marriages
Marriages dissolved were Randy
McDaniel and Carol Sue McDaniel,
the plaintiff was restored to the use
of her former name Carol Sue Ross;
Robert D. Deeter and ·Mary Kay
Deeter; Danny M. Barber and
Vickie Lee Barber; Teresa Jankins
and Timothy Jenklna.
Divorces granted were Wayne
Thornton Devault from Carol Ann
Devault; Vicki Lynn Rlffle from
James D. Riffle.

fo meet Thursday
Preceptor Chapl8r of Bell Si&amp;Jna
Phi will meet 'l'lluradaJ, New. 12, at

7:41 pJII. in tile River Bolt roam at
DiamOnd Savii!Ciand lAD.

IIOUIICed by a.p. &lt;l&gt;arlee Rantlel, [). .
N.Y., chalnnan of the oYel'lli&amp;la
COOimittee, UMW president Sam
Cllurch 8llld hla unlan could Uve with
it.
Current, black lung benefit
redpienta and tboee who will IDe
clalnis until the new leglllaUon Is
enacted "don't have anythlnc to
worry about with this propoaal,"
Church said.

Plan bake sale

To end marriages

Tbe Forest Run Methodist Church
will sponsor a bake sale Friday,
Nov. 13, at the Dale C. · Warner
building from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

A suit for divorce and a dissolution
of Jnarriage were filed in Mei!lS
County Common Pleaa Court.
Roberta A Hawk, Middleport and
Steven P. Hawk, Athens, filed for
dissolution of marriage and Tammy
Lynn Richards, Pomeroy, filed suit
for divorce against Daniel Paul
Richards, Point Pleasant.

Marriage license
A marriage license was issued to
Thomas Charles Porter, Jr., and
Tammie Louise Fetty, 18, Rt. I;
Langsville.

•

PropeJ1Y transfers_·- - - - - Carl E. Mitchell, Lila Sue MitcbeU
to Lena K. Nesselroad, Parcels,
Salisbury· Pomeroy.
Lena K. Nesselroad, George W.
Nesselroad, Jr., to Lena K. Nessel·
road, George W. Nesselroad, Jr.,
Parcels, Pomeroy ·Salisbury.
George N esselroad , Lena
Nesselroad to 'George W.
Nesselroad, Jr., lAma K. NeS.'le!·
road, Parcels, Salisbury.
Rita L. Harmon to Terry J. Har·
mon, Lot, Middleport.
Dallas B. Celand, Geraldine
Celand to Gallia.Jackson-Meigs
· Mental Health Center, LOt 2
Cleland's Sub., Racine.
Larry M. Bissell to Columbia Gas
of Ohio, Inc. and Columbia Gas
Transmission Corp., Agree. and
Ease., Rutland.
Deborah MiUhone to Columbia
. Gas of Ohio, Inc. and Columbia Gas
Transmission C!lrp., Agree. and
Ease., Olive.
Asa A. Hoskins and Julian W. Hof·
!man, Affidavit, Meigs.
Asa A. Hoskins to Gerald Glenn
Gibbs, Erma Mae Smith, Harold H.
Smith, H. Eugene Smith, Robert W.
SMith, 3'1.85 acres, Bedford.
Venture OU and Gas Inc. to Sunset
Petroleum Inc., Assign of RW,
Pomeroy.
Clair E. Mitchell, Marcella Mitchell, Thomas Crisp, Mary F. Crisp, .
James Llirge, Carla N. Large, to
Smith Asaociatea, Inc., Assign. of
Easement, Sutton, Meigs.
Clair E. Mitchell, Marcella MitcheU, James Large, Carla M. Large,
Thomas Crisp, Mary F. Crisp to
Smith ABsociatea, Inc., Parcel, Sui·

Kenneth Chaney, Dorothy Chaney,
1.49 acres, Bedford.

present ever," he told trainers In
Houston.
NASA officials were a bit wary of
a storm ft:OOI headed ~ Cape
Canaveral, but the weather oulloolt
appeared good for 'Ibunday.
"Right now they're saying the
weather should be OK for launch,"·
aald NASA spokesman Mark Hess.
"That front Is ezpecled to move
throogh here 9n Wednelday and be
gone by Thursday."
The second COWltdown iB sho!Ur
than the first, becalllle officials
decided that the early porilona of the
original need not be repeated. So, instead of a full count ticking down
from 73 hours, It will atart at 35
hours. Four planned holda totaling
12¥.. houra stretch the exerciae over
~7¥.. hours, compared with 1291' for
the origirud
On their arrival here, Engle and
Truly were to follow the same
·schedule as last week.
They were to fly aerobatlc
maneuvera In T-31 jets late today to
adjust their Inner ears to · accelerations and reduce the
possibility of motloo sickness In orbit and then retire at 6:15 p.m.
Their Wednesday schedule calls
for a 4a.m. wakeup, a pre-dawn visit
to the launchpad, and a few hours
doing emergency landing practices
·in a jet aircraft that handles Uke the
Columbia.
They are to go to bed at5 p.m., and
be awakened at 2:40 a.m. Thursday
for their big day.
During five days In space, Engle,
a 49-year-old Air Force colonel, and
Truly, a Navy captain, '8re to subject
Columbia's systems to more
rigorous tests than John YOUII8 and
Robert Crippen did during the

Auditor checks
for welfare cheats

CLEVELAND (AP) State
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson said
lnapection of payroll data from
private compani.., is proving a suc·
cesslul way of catching welfare

s.-.

Area deaths

·

Macel McDade
Macel McDade, 68, of 214 Poplar
St., Point Pleasant, died at 10 a\m.
Sunday In Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She was the daughter of the late·
Steward Leslie and Mattie Mulford
Denney, and was also preceded in
death by her hwlband, ~'sri E. McDade, on July 11, 1978.
Surviving are four daughters,
· Mrs. Sally Sue Nibert of West
Colwnbia, Mrs. Patricia Ann Jordan
of Mount Alto, Mrs. Ruth Jordan of
Point Pleil.sant and .Mrs. Wanda Jordan of Leon; two sons, Owens of
Point Pleasant and Wayne of Ml!ldleport; five sisters, Mrs. Hazel
Blose and Mrs. SylVia Lambert, both

of Leon, Mrs. Okley Hudaon and
Mrs. Jewell Burna, both of Southside
and Mrs. Thelma Saxon of

Gallipolis; three brOthers, Lorlline
of Lancaster, Wade of Westmoreland, Tenn. and Owen of Vin·
ton; 11 grandchildren and two greatgrandchildren.
Also preceding her in death were
two sona, two daughters and two
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at 11

a.m. Wmesday in the Crow-HuaaeU
Funeral Home, with the Rev. Herman Jordan and the Rev. Jack Fin- .
nicum officiating. Burial will be In
Pine Grove Cemelery, near Leon.
Friends may caD at the funeral
home anytime today. ·

Doe breaks into Columbus home·
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - Beia
Kovach was quite sure his wife ·was
either being beaten to death or she'd
flipped.

.

Thinking the ho~MJe had .been
burglarized, Ms. Bedroolan called
her husband at work and told him 11
the damage.
Kovach told bar to see if anybody
was sliD In the house while ber
husband waited on the telephone,
then can police.
Aa Ms. Bedrosian entered the
family room abe found herself face
to face with a 175 pound doe.
The next think Kovach heard over
the telephone was a blood-curdling
scream.
Kovach picked liP another
telephone and called police as his
wife started shouting about the deer.

house.

ELBERFELD$.

ci«JJI~.~~i
11

IT'S
FOR IHEL
T't..r'5 IIWDU ,.._.liD...._

+

Every Wednesday Night At

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

.'

iAKED STEAK DINNER
Served with Mashed Potatoes, Choice of Salad,
Rolland Drink

DINING ROOM ONLY

SyraCUJM!,
Demolkey, Dec'd:, to

very feminine - a T-shlrt stripe cowl neck ov Joan

Curtis In a Celanese Forfrel8 polyester knit. All the
·right touches are added In the rrklltt elaallc
stitching at the walll and a II8IY Pl8ttlf double
elaltlclzed bell. Colen are
ltllpe onc:t beige
~. Sizes 1()..18. Machine washable. SOO.OO

orev
.

Craw's Family Restaurant
221W. Mtlln

~,..--:-

PII,,.MJ2

Olllo

,

-·------·-----

c::llr--ir
"
The Saving Place .. .

The atate recently checked payroll
Social Security nwnbers from eight
companies in the Cleveland area to
deterine if any of the nwnbers mat·
ched those of Cuyahoga County
welfare recipients.

Lorraine M. CUndiff, .'13'11 acre,

.,......_

l

Tllllraday. ( AP Luerpfloto).

+

Wed. Thru Sat.

cheats.

Glenn I. Cwtdlfl, Sr., Rachel E.
Cundiff to Shennan A. Cundiff,

LIUlan Demallkey, WWiam Edward
Demcllltey, Betty Lou Denney, AI·
lldavit of Trana., Mlddllport.
Geraldine Smith, btnl.. J Gainer, dec. to WIDlarn T. Ratlllf, .
Juanita E. Rallill, Parcels,
Pomeroy.
Burl J. Walker, !Wen Lee
Walker, Patrlc:la E. Walker
Hamiltall, 'l1lllmll F. Hamilton 11!

"'*"

"First, I thought someone was at·
tacking her: Then I heard her
• scream, 'It's a deer! It's a deer,"
aald Kovach, 51, a nuclear scientist
for a Columbus finn.
And sbe was right. A deer did the
maideo l1ighl Four more teat flights
deed, breaking Into the home Wedare planned before the ship begins nesday where Kovach and his wife,
satellite-hauling .missions late next translator Alma Bedrosian, Jive in
year.
Columbus.
Kovach says his wife got home
from work about 5 p.m. and notiCed
a front window broken out of the

Asa A. Hoskins to Carl E. Smith
Petrolewn, Inc., Right of Way,
Orange.
Jesse Gainer, dec. to Geraldine
· Slnith, Rita Buckley, Cert. of trans.,
Lebanon.
"Computer runs or this lnW. A. Gibbs, Sarah Gibbs toW. A. fonnation netted 28 cases In which
'Gibbs, Sarah Gibbs, Parcels, $86,925 in fraud is suspected,"
•
Salisbury.
Ferguson said here Monday.
Theresa Fisher and Paul P.
He said In one. caae, '17,789 in
Fisher, Dec'd., ' Affidavit, Mi!l- questionable payments
was
dleport.
received by one recipient since MarAaron Kelton, Iiis Kelton to Don chi, 19'10•.
Eynon, Diana Eynon, 1 acre,
Ths 28 were among 2811 cases, ln:Pomeroy.
volving$331,9116in suspected welfare
Don Eynon, Diana Eynon to fraud, sent Monday from Ferguson
Christopher A. Yeauger, Brenda K. to Cuyahoga County Prosecutor
Yeauger, I acre, Pomeroy.
Jolm T. Corrigan., _
· Vickie L. Barber to Danny M. Bar·
ber, 1¥.. acres, Olive.
The companies that provided
E:ugene harless, Imogene Hampayroll
information were not !den-'
ner, Virginia H. Thacker, Affidavit
·
tlfied
by
FergUson. Thsy supplied
and Notice for Preservation of Inthe
lnfonnatlon
voluntarily,
terest, Pomerooy.
Ferguson
lllid.
James R. Acree, Betty L. Acree to
Most ol the other cases tumed
Leading Creek Conservancy Dist.,
over
to Corrigan involve employees
Hight of way, Sallabury.
of school districta.

ton.

Edward

NASA VIEW OF SIIU'ITLE- Gallla CoHee of NASA cbeeU varloWJ
emaera 'riewl of lbe
JJballle Columbia TUesday llllll'llllll u tile
eoaatdowu renmed a1111e Keauedy
Ceuter. Uftoff II ocWlded lor

Open Daily 10·9; sunday 1·6

- ..,._ -

•FORTREL Ia a trademark of Fiber Indullrlea Inc
"• aublldlary of C.lanaa Corporation.
'
·•

)

Thank·you to..Shopplng at K mart"

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