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Columbia begins, 5-day test flight
By HOWARD BENEDICT

,..,., APAei'OipaeoWrfter
'-""ECANAVJ;;RAL.Fla. (AP)Columbl8 sailed mto orbit today, the
first cra~t frun Earth to make a
return tnp to spac~.
.
The shutUe earned two Amencan
astronauts on a !tve-day test night to
prove Columbia is a truly reflyable
rock~tship ..;.. and more. Scientific
morutors were aboard the ship,
along with a robot a~ tha~ wiU
demonstrate the shuttle s abllity to

• work in space. .
Ourifl8 the f1rst revolution, Joe

EJ18le and Richard Truly were to
crank up the !irst of many tasks on
their busy flight plan - opening and
closing Columbia's huge cargo bay
doors.
.
Three nunutea Into the night,
Mission Control In Houston said
Columbia's engines were running
very smoothly and four minutes
shutUe. co~.~icator . Dan Brandenstem sa1d Columbw now com-

mltted to space night."

" Verysrnooth," saidEngle.
It is the first trip into space tor
both astronauts, and a thunderous

celebration !or Truly's 44th birthdsy.
Columbia was soaring more than
100 miles above Earth at 17,400 mph.
The craft was scheduled to make 83
orbits in live days before gliding to
Earth next Tuesday artemoon on the
Rogers Dry Lake in California's
Mojave Desert.

•

Columbia's COWitdown, salvaged
by a reverish, eleventh-hour repair
job, climaxed in a burst of fire and
smoke as the craft's three main
engines and two ~olid fuel rocket
booaters flaahed to life, punishing
the launch pedestal with a dazzling
sheetof !lame.
Ignition came at 10;10 a.m. EST _
8 days after an earlier countdown
was scrubbed just 31 seconds from
T-zero.
Just before the scheduled 10 a.m.

at y

e
Vol.lO,No.149
.C opyrighted 1981

liftof!there was one Ia8t, brier, delay
with launch director George Page
Mlinghis control team, "Let's take
our time and do it right." 111ey did
and the launch was per!ect.
Just before the ship escaped communications for the !irst time, Engle
told Mission Control "The burn (to
orbit) loobgood ~y. "
The launch trajectory _ NASA
caUs it an "attack angle" _ was
steeper than for Columbia'~ April
ascent, 11!1 effort by the space agen-

.

cy to test the shutUe's design limits
by subjecting the ship to higher
pressure loads.
The spacecraft moved swiftly
away from pad 39A, clearif18 the 347·
foot service tower in 7 seconds and
arcing out over the Atlantic Ocean
on a northeast heading.
The astronauts were riding upside
down as Columbia roUed to orbit,
sjlewing 700-foot-long • plumes c1
white smoke from the solid fuel
Continued on page 7

"

enttne

•
1 Settion, 12 Pages lS Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 12, 1981

.•

. 'IUP .FARM FAM]LY - James lUld Mary BuHman, Route 3,
Pomeroy, """'tved the larm family award at lhe all111181 SoU aad Water
Conservation Dl.olrict meeting Tuesday olgllt. ·

OOODYEAR WINNERS - John Fultz, lef(, operator • tile: ~elp
Tire Center, prMented the Goodyear Awan! :or ouilltaacling eonservatioil
practices to Joe BaUey, Rutlsnd Township, at the annual meeting olllle

Meigs SWCD Tuesday olght.

LD
Council suspends balloting

1

UNITED NATIONS- The U.N. Security Council has suspended
ballotif18 in the secretary-general's race and is discussing ways to end
the Chinese-American deadlock blocking the re-election of Kurt
Waldhelm or his replacement.
!'~either Waldhelm, the Austrian inc~bent seeking an unprecedented·thlrd tenn, nor his Third World challenger, Tanzanian
Foreign Minister Satim Ahmed Salim, showed any readinesS to withdraw after eight rounds of balloting. Both·were vetoed on each one,
Waldheim by China, which is committed to a Third World candidate,
and Salim by the United Stale&amp;.
The Chinese had been expected to conclude that Salim did not have a
chaD~ and to abandon him after demonstrating their commitment to
the Third World. But a Russian council source said indications were
that the Chinese were prepared to veto Waldhetm indefinitely.
There was no indication either that the United State&amp; was prepared
to withdraw Its opposition to Salim.
. A weU-jllaced. U.N, sc•uce said Japan is advocating a marathon
baUotlng aeuiiln that would produce a winner or demonstrate that the
~U is hopeleasly deadlocked and should open the race to compromise candi~~- ·

Uni_versity students call strike .
'

WARSAW, Poland- Student leaders caUed a six-hour strike today
in all 91 PoUsh lnstltutiona of higher education.
·
The independent students' 118110Ciation called the strike in support of
~glneerlng students In Radom. They were in the 18th day of a sit-in
protesting the election of a new rectpr for their college.
Another strike caJJ Wl!llt 0111 from the leaders or the 40,000 employees
. in dairy' cooperati-. 'lbey called a one-hoiu- stoppage Monday In support of demands for pay lncri!aaes and a new charier, the official PAP
news agency repgrfe!l.
.
11le dairy workers threatened ll!llndeflnite strike Nov. 23 if their
demands were not inel.
\ A strike by newspaper vendors and distributors in four provinces
spm~d to the tOWlll of PlJa 8nd Chodziez, northwest of Warsaw. A
~e by 1110,000 workers In Zielona Gara province went Into Its fourth
w:eek, but no ta1lts with the government to end It i.ere scheduled.
Solidarity leader Lech Waleu .'lnlrned . 2,500 strlldng miners in
Soanowiec to be prepared for 1ovenunent action against them that
could result In violence.
.

.

'

Lottery winners
CLEVELAND - 'l1le

wimllnC munber drawn Wednesday night In

the Ohio Lottery's daUy pme"The Numller" waall3.
The lottery reported eamiJIIII of fl!ll,auo on the drawing. 'l1le eatnlnga came on 18._ of $!81,D.IO,
ot wlnnJaa tlcbti are
entitled to share PII,JII, llllterJ off1claJa &amp;aieL

while._..

State weather forecasts
'•o

.

a

_ ....,
:r--''"'

ObloE•'
I' t•F I • • • • •
IWIII1 days and cl- alii* .................. Dilly 1111'- fnn the
up_per liOll to lower8011111111on ID the mklllll to 1o1r 111.

Clear tonight llld 1W1111ll'rldl.r· LGwl tG!IIalll ...r 110. Righi Frlda:r
&amp;HQ. a.anee of pnciptlallall ,.. I k1ni8bt and Jl'rtda:r.

Wlndl~· .... ··~ ....

.

•

SOD.: CONTFSl' WINNERS - James Carsey, right, """'lves on
behalf of the Meigs High Schoel FF A soU judging team, the first place
trophy from Lawrence Bush, ,.resenting Landmark wblcb provided lhe
.
award, at lhe anaual Meigs SWCD meeting Tuesday night.

~

Awards
highlight
banquet
Several awards were presented at
the 38th annual meeting of the Meigs
SOil and Water Conservation District
l)leetlng, held Tuesday night at the
Senior Citizens Center.
Rex Shenefield of ·the board of
supervisors served as master of
ceremonies for the &lt;!inner meeting
attended by approxbnately 100 persons.
Shenefield and Tom Theiss were
'reelected to three year tenns on the .
board of supervisors beginning Feb.
1, 1982, and Robert Grieser, past
chalnnan of the Soil and Water Con- ·
servation Corilmisslon, spoke on
"Changing Times."
The outstanding !ann family
COntinued on page 7

SALUTE ro VETERANS-Tbe lradltioaal aaiute to
Veteraos was performod by members of Drew Weboter

Post, 3!1, American f.e&amp;lon Wednesday momiDg In
front of lhe Pomeroy Courthouse.

Former Pomeroy resident recalls
horror of Nazi concentration camp
'

"Abject horror." That wa8 the
reaction of Richard Elber!eld,
fonnerly of Pomeroy, when he
participated in the liberation of a
Nazi concentration camp near
Belsen, Germany.
Then 21 years old, Elberfeld entered the camp April 20, 1945, as
an ambulance driver In a volunteer American Field Service unit
attsched to the British Army.
"One of the things I remember
was the horrible stench," says
Elber!eld, a Hamilton resldem
who now serves as manag!'f of
Butler County's CETA (Comprehensive Employment and
Tralni!1g Act) training Jlf08l'IJll.
An estimated 10,000 unburied
COrPses were strewn about the liO
acre site. In aU, about 70,000 viclima died at Belsen.
· Elber!eld's job, however, was
to help the survivors of the

holocaust.
"We were assigned the fun-

damealal job of worklnJ with the

Uvtna peaplttryiJII to 101'1 oat the

tbei11G1lld make It from .the
we dldil't tbb* would make
It," he nealla; '
-

-

"We probably made some
wrong decisions, but we'D never
know which ones were wrong."
"We would, go into a hut that
had three-tiered bunks. If a set of
bunks was designed for three
people, there might be six people
in the bunks.
None of the intemees had been
fed during the last 10 days of German control, according to George
Rock, author of The History of
the American Field Service.
Before that the normal food
ration was a liter of tUrnip soup
dallY' ~nd one loaf of bread
weekly.
The AFS, an organization for
people who wanted to help the
war effort but were not eligible
for military service, worked from
dawn until sundown, getting the
prisoners - who iilcJuded Poles,
Czechs, French, Greeks,
Belgians, and Rlllllans - ready
to be transported to repatriation
centers.
Many of those Imprisoned were
Jews.
Though the Allies fighting in
Europe had read llld heard of the·

horrors of the Nazi concentration
. camps, nothing could have
prepared tliem for the reality of
Belsen. .
"I think anybody who lived at
that time knew, parficularly in
regard to the Jews, that Hitler
had camps and he was herding
Jews into camps ...
"But I don't think anyone
realized the magnitude of it and
how horrible one man or group c1
people could be to human beings,
particularly to the children,"
Elberfeld said.
"I think that bothered me more
than anything else. To see those
children who had no food, who
were obviously starving to death
and had no medical care.
."The sights, sounds and victims' stories had a powerful Impact on the liberators. One
coUeague had to be dismissed
from the cleanup operations
because he could not hold up under the stresa.
"II waa an interesting thing
because this was a person who
had been overseas for about three
years'a nd had seen an awful lot of

action, but never anything of lhiB
sort, n he said.
"When you're dealing with
troops, fighting troops, you expect someone to be shot .. . But
when you're deaUng with innocent civilians who were just
victims because of their
nationality or religion, you have a
much deeper feeling about it."
Elber!eld took his memories
from the Belsen experience to the
International Liberators Confeence in Washington, D. C.
The conference was held Oct.
26-28, sponsored by the u. s.
Holocaust Memorial Council.
Elberfeld was representing Ohio
and received a teatimonlallor his
service at the close of the conference.
"I think the general idea of the
conference was to make people
realize that what happened
before can happen again," he
uys.
Elberfeld is a son or the late
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Elberfeld of .
~'«Deroy and is a brother to Mra.
Mary Morris, UncoJn HID ao.d.

.\

�Pomerov-MiddJtJI(irt, Ohio

Commenta1-y

.. '

~R~~~
___.;.-_ __
Here we go agaaJu·nL_ _ _ _ _ _ __:___ _ _ _

I'

:j

One swallow does not a sununer
The United Presbyterian Cburch
' tilake, true, but I herewith Bllnounce elects to publish an address given by
· that the campaign lor unilateral George Kennan last spring. The
dl.Bannament Is in season. We are Presbyterian editors of 'A.D. 1981''
hearing now eucUy the lt1nd of could not more appropriately have
thing we heal'd during the late '508 decorated it. In a piece in which Mr.
and early '608 when Seymour KelUJan leans heavily on the sym· Melman of Colwnbls was preaching bolism of reducing our atomic ar. the redundancy of our firepower, senal, the editors come up with an
· Norman Cousins and the Corrunlttee illuatration of a muscular genfor a Sane Nuclear Policy were tleman, hill arm raised high,
preaching the inevitability of carrying a hruruner.
nuclear war if we continued l&lt;.sting
"This atatue, 'Let us Beat Swords
and producing weapons, pnd David into Ploughshares" by Soviet sculpRleaman and a small band in Har- tor Evgeniy Vuchetich, was a gift to
vard were producing a · journal the United Nations by the USSR. It
calling for unilateral disannament.
stands in the U.N. ganlen ~oW.!w
' The arguments are, really,- the York City." Certain questions crowd
same. Juat as in those days t. P. . the .mind. How did Mr. Vuhetich
Snow argued the scientific linow that we were supposed to beat
inevitahllity of a nuclear exchange, swords iJ)to ploughshares? Where in
so currently do we hear thiJl from the Soviet Union did he find
others, for instance George Kennan, somebody to give him a Bible, which
the distinguished hiJltorian and for- carries that injunction? WBS Mr.
mer diplomat. Nothing very new has · Vuchetich sent to a mental hospital
been added.
for the counter-revolutionary sin of
After all, if It is true that 20 year• acting out a biblical injuncUon? How.
ago the Soviet Union and the United come the Soviet Union sent out such
states disposed of enough firepower a statue, ~bodying a biclical man· to blot each other out, it would not date, to the United Nations? Ah,
aPP.""' to this humble moralist to be could (t be because the Soviet
a situation drastically worsened in Union's own failure to beat swords
which each country now disposes of into ploughshares made It emenough firepower to blot each other barrassing to keep the thing around?
outlOtimes. Or 100tlmes. IfltiB true
But what are the Presbyterians up
that there is a redundancy of fire. to? The Soviet Union in the post
power, then it is also true that there ' decade has engaged tn a program of
is a redundancy of concern. One can militarization of an intensity unonly lear lor the IOSB of one's life to matched by Adolf Hiller. Is the
the lull extent of one's emotional suggestion that the editors have
resources. Beyond fullnel!s, is discovered the true spirit Of the comnothing.
munists?

The Daily Sentinel
lJlCourtSireel
) '

Pomeroy, Ohio
114-99!-21SB

~I

DEVOTED TO TifE MEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

.

~v

,

Bm~ r""T'........'--~·~=~-===-

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Asslataal Pu blillher /ConlroUu

GtDeral Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
-New. EdJCer

•'

A MEMBER of Tht A11otlaled Pres1, Inland Dally Pres1 AuoelatJoa and tbe
Amer:leaa NeWipaper Publllllcn Auoclalloo .

LE'I'T£RS OF OPINION •~ wrltomtd, They ahould be leu U..n 301 worda loa&amp;. AU

leUen an •ubjecC &amp;o edltlng aDd mull be 1lped with name, addren aDd Celepboat aam.

ber. No Wlllped !etten wW be pubiiiMd. Letten 1hould be La good ta1t.e, •dd.reul.lll

luues, DOC penoaaU1lea.

'

Myths ·ahout
· Social Security

The introduction to Mr. KelUlaD 's
speech talks about the Christian
desire for peace, and speaka aadly of
the fact that we are "Christians who
are called to live In a world that has
gone aligbtly Insane." The difficulty
with loose language )ike that Is that
if you stake out the proposition that
the world is tnsane, It Is aafety aay it ·
was · always ir)sane. After aU,
Cluistians believe that life is everlasting, und that for those who
struggle to do right there is eternal
reward, while lor those who do ·not
make the effort there is eternal damnation. Clearly any world is at the
very least slightly insane in which,
under the circumstances, everyone
does not struggle to do the righl
thing.
But if.tlie editors mean the world
Is Insane in which nuclear weapons
exist, surely what Is lfisane Is not the
weapons, but contingently, the
motives Of those who manufacture
them?
How intensely sad to see someone
of the quality of Mr.. Kennan write:
"I question whether these devices
are really weapoDB at all. A true
weapon is something with which you
endeavor to affect the behavior of
another society by inlluenctni\ the
minds, the calculators, the intentions of the people who control
that society." WeD. A nuclear

weapon Induced the people who controlled Japan to end the wat, with
the result that an estimated ur
million people lived who otherwise
would have been killed. The·
weapons we have lnlluenced the
Soviet Union to llmit their
aggressions. Would Mr. KelUJan

have traded a Hlrolhima bomb for
the rescue of two million Cambodians? If we had had the bomb a
year earlier and might, by using It
against Hitler, have spared the lives
of 2.5 nilllion Jewa, would he Instead
have thrown the bomb to the seas?
It Is likelier, at the rate we are

going, that we wUJ be found guilty of

besting our brains Into belp!ee . ,

than that we will, by 'IUCb .11111deleating agitation, Induce lbe

~u!=~la~=.:=

others who labor IIIII weep outalde
the prolection of our lll'lll!ilal.

ROGER BISSEIJ..
ltllb.Jr.
ll!ldl

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Both i J. "Jake" Pickle and Bill ArCher are
congressmen from Texas. But Pickle is a Democrat of the old Southern
school while Archer iB a Republican in the new mold of George Bush.
.
Pickle chairs the House subcommittee on Social Security; Archer is the
'
: conunittee's ranking minority member. Both are experts on the problems of
WASWNGTON (NEA) - Mter
· the Social Security system, which they agree muat be revamped eztensively months of negotiations, the
:· if It is to survive Its financial pressures.
proponents of conunerclal nuclear
They also agree that the current debate over Social Security is eing power have convinced the White
made more difficult by a number of popular misconceptions. These are some Houoe to endorse their technology as
of them:
"One of the best potential sources of
,
- Social Securlty hBS put aside my money to be available to me In new electrical energy supplies."
; retirement. This hBS not been true sil!ce the inception of Social ~urity.
But President Reagan's rOdomon• Current payroll withholding taxes have always been used to pay the benefits tade on behalf of the industry is not
: of the previous generation. The Social Security fund had never had a matched by recent developments ; "cushion" of more than t3 months; that cushion now hBS been reduced to Including cancellations, post• three montha.
··
ponellle!!ts and emharraBSing mill- A large amount of Social Security taxes go to puy administrative ups involving nuclear power
-· costs. More than half of those interviewed ina recent national poll expressed/· facilities throughout the country.
• the opinion that more thsn 50 percent of Social Securily's income went to
An extraordinary sta Iemen!
: paying admlnlstrative expenses; 5 percent of the respondents thought that issued last month In Reagan's name·
more than 90 percent went to administrative expenses. In fact, only 1.3 per- claimed that "revitalization of the
, ·cent of Soclsl Security's income Is used to run the system.
United Statea Industry's efforts to
.: - Benefits are lower today than they were 31 years ago In real dollars. develop nuclear power" waa being
·:Even taking inflation Into account, benefits are worth 38 percent more in thwarted principally by un:purchaaing power today than they were two decades ago.
warranted government meddling:
- The Social Security trust funds have been "bled" to help meet the
"Unfortunately, the federal govercosts of other government progriuns, ,Social Securlty income - from the
nment hBS created a regulatory envery ltrst dollar received - has been used only to pay those benefits . vironment that Is forcing many
'presCribed by law under the program.
utilities to rule out nuclear power as
.• -The money in the social Security trust lunda hBS not been invested. In a so~ of new generating capacity
/act, every dollar taken In by the Prot!ram is invested in govenunent bonda
lhat earn interest at the going rate.
"Nuclear power hBS become en-You will never get back what you paid into Social Security. In fact, a
tangled in a morass of regulations
married worker who has paid the maximum aount Into Social Security since' that do not enhance safety but that
the program went into effect and who retired today at age eo would get back -do cause extensive licensing delays ·
every cent within 13 montlla. He would have paid fi4,87UI into the fund if he and economic uncertainty."
Jllarled contributing the maximum on Day One and would receive f1,129.40
Events In the weeks preceding and
manthly upon retiring today'
'
following distribution of tliat
: ObviOUIIy payroll taxes are a lot higher now than they were in the past,
SmwoJoe comlag Into the program today Is going to pay mach more than I
P4,000 over bla 'WOI'IdJI8 yem~. But benefltlevela are allo rlllnl; If benefits' ·
· eon11nue to keep r-ce with inflation, by the time lbla new ~rIa ready for '
'i-atlrenlent In 40 yean, bla lll!lllthly checb will be much blahar than ft,J.29.
': - Soclmlleeurity ta not In IUCh bad lhlpe Iller an; Jnter.lund bot •owing,
~ Ia iiiC
ry to tide It over. "The fund Ia 101iln8 fl2,000 a •ute,"
· ·
PJdde, "Payrolltu:• are currently 13.3 pe~cent; If thlnp lteep 11
iolag the way tbeJ are, the)' will be 25 percent by the,_ :1100. The Old Age '
ilid SW vlvwa Fliiid will run out ol ~ I!OIDIIIme In ltlll
.
- : ''Wblla 1111 - keep It .t!Oit perbapl UDIIl tbe end Ill the . . . by
bCrrowiDg frllm tbe Gtber fandll within tbe 111t1m. we are oaJ,r vwlponlili
lhltdiJ llfrec::loidiJC. Wei111181 have fundamenlal NfCNm, IIIII we iDiilt hive
ltiDOIL"
• · J11it .._ tbe """'•~lloallllllllll p•lt'o•Uy dlupd amwphe~e ,
lllllw• '""'1111 ptCJII'IIIII, bolll Pickle IIIII Arelw ..... lhlt bule refCNm
will bealiDOIIIi•\ wl!!le toacblne orw tbe i111t

World War II, the IRC turned its attention to refugees from the Soviet
bloc. The committee; while serving
a legitimate function, had always
cooperated with U. S. and British intelligence.
William "Wild Bill" Donovan, former head of the Office of 'Strateglc
Services, the CIA's wartime
predecessor agency, was In charge
of the money transfer. At the time,
he headed a specialiRC commission
assigned to protect Iron Curtain
defectors from being forced back to
Eastern Europe.
An IRC dinner was scheduled for
Feb. 'II In Berlin. Those in attendance were Gennan politicians,
labor leaders and IRC board members, Including Claiborne Pell, now
ranking minority member of the
Senste Foreign Relations Committee.
.
Shortly' before that dinner,
Donovan hired two couriers to
deliver the cash to Brandt. They
were paid at least f1,000 cash.
The first courier, a longtime CIA
agent and an old friend of Donovan,
was told that his mission was "vital
to the government." Donovan gave
him a locked briefcase which he said
contained German marks "in the sill

Mille Billeli

John Reibel

Ill lb. Sr.

~lb.&amp;

Quarterback

Back

P. G. RJHe
mlb.&amp;

Girls cage preview Saturday
More detallB on the girls' preview
The llrat annual Southern Valley
Athletic Conference girls' basketball will appear in Friday's edition as the
preview will be held at Kyger Creek traditional EBStern-Southern rivalry
HighSchool, Saturday beginning at 7 i.lll open ·another season of hard·
wood play.
p.m.
Three league rivalries wiD be mat- f"'jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii. .iiiiii~
ched up in a preview of what may
On Friday, Nov. 2G, the SV AC

r· 1110D)eD

~
-o
·
I~

boys' teams will make their hardwooddebut,alsoatKygerereek.

W~

by

figures" - or at least $25,000 at that
time.
Brandt and the courier rendezvoused In their cars near the
Brandenburg Gate, the boundary between East and West Berlin. Both offered "recognition phrases." Then
the CIA agent and the future chancellor went. to a nearby restaurant
~nd chatted about politics. At some
point, the courier handed over the
briefcase.
The next day, the second courier
rnet Brandt at a bar in West Berlin
and delivered· the key to the brief-

case.
Later in 1956, Brandt's political
star rose suddenly when he talked a
crowd of 75,000 Berliners out of marching toward the East-West bo\IDdary for a confrontation with the
Soviets. In 1957, Brandt was elected
mayor of West Berlin, a vantage
point from which he ran successfully
for chancellor of West Germany in
1989.
Ironically, it was in 11156, the year
of Brandt's melodramatic puyoff In
Berlin, that the inan wbo was to be
his downlall arrived in West Berlin
- and may have been helped by
Wild Bill Donovan's rescue commission. POSing as a defector from

Feds aren't always at

East Gennany, Gunter Gulllawne
"fled" to the West and joined the
Social Delnocratic Party. Eventually, he became one of Chancellor
Brandt's closest personal aides.
Guillaume was arrested as a spy
in April 1974; Brandt resigned two
weeks later.

NICK LEONARD
liS Pound
Selilor Llaeman

C. T.Chapman

15GPoand
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Leonard,·Shriver oom MVP honors

:Eastern, North Gallia dominate
1981 All-SVAC football squad

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MeAn. With genuine ieather or nubuck uppers and a
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and comfort. For the women that want the outdoor look.

Champion Eastern and runnerup
North Gallia dominated ihe 1981 All· .
Southern Valley Athletic Conference
football team, selected Monday
evening by ·the league's six head

coaclies.

UNDER THE DOME: "Behind
every successful inan there's an incr~dulous moiher-ir!-law," one
House member obllerved drily
during the debate on declaration of ·
National Molher-in-Law Day. And
behind every succesalul pin there's
an Industrious lobbying effort. The
mother-in-law legialatli&gt;n was no excepljon. Alerted by the Flortsta
Transworld Delivery Association to
the prollt potential of such ·a
congressional declaration, the
nation's 31,000 Dortsta deluged members of Congress jl'ith letters In support of the legislation. It aalied
through the !louse, but Senate
leaders decided not to deal with It
this year.
Even so, the publicity generated
by the debate is credited with an extra f3 million In flower aales on the
last Sunday of Octob,er.

ALANPAPE

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Eastern, which completed its

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North Gallia High School at 7:30
p.m. Nov. II.
.
The clinic wUJ cover rules and
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promote wreatllng in the area, according to Ted Lehew, North Gallia
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Wash., after the projected con- with reversing the diagrBmB for the
struction costs more than tripled to two units.
$12 billion.
The hlatory of that facility
In each of those indlistries, in- provides 8 textbook example of how
dustry defenders have sought to the industry got Into the
ascribe a subatantial portion of their predicament 11 faces today.
difficulties to the evils of excessive
When PG&amp;E was evaluating the
federal regulation - but that excuse site 1n the mid-1980s, It conducted
cannot explam the proble!DB faced elaborate geologic and -seismic surby the country's currently most con- . veys ,to search fo_r land-based faUlt
,troverslal nuclear power plant.
· tines that mlsht indicate potential
· That ~acllity ~ the Diablo Canyon earthqualie acUvity _ but no off.
generating alation, owned by the shore tests were conducted, even
Pacific .Gas and Electric Co. and though the plant lies dlrectly on the
located near Avila Beach, . Calif., Pacific Ocean.
- midway betweeq San Franc~ and
Las Angeles.
In early 1971, however, two
After spending f2.3 billion and
.
geologists
working for the Shell Oil
almost 15 years to construct a pair of
nuclear power untta.PG&amp;E stili can- Co. disclosed that they had found a
not operate the plant - beCause ot a fault Une beneath the OCIIIJI floor
series of errors committed by Its less than five miles from the plant.
In mld-11113, when the company
own aclentiata ana engineers. .
formally
applied to federal officials
Among the recent mistakes to be
for
a
license
to operate the ~t.
. publicly identified is what PG&amp;E
PG6E
finally
acknowledged
theureuphemistically calla "a design
thquake
danger,
.
discrepancy" - a company mixup
Government regulators then
ol the blueprints used In designing
required
the utiUty to reb11ftt ihe enearthquake supports for plptug ln.
tire
plaM
to provide addlliOIIII ear·
thereacturs.
thquake
prole•:lloo
~ but the comThe president's (and the inpaiiJ' mJcbt lave avoided yean Ill
dustry's) favorite acapegoata government regulation and bureau- grief If It lad taken the proper
JI!088Ii1"' oo ill own ,
erato - hBd absolutely nothing to do ..,-ullcioary
Initiative.

house ~

OF SHOES

.

.

atatement suggest, however, that
the troubled induatry suffers from
serious problems that extend far
beyond the '• arbitrary federal
policy" blamed by the president.
The Boston Edison Co., New
England's largest utility, has announced that it Is abandoning plans
to build a second nuclear facility at
its Pilgrim generating station near
Plymouth, Mass.
The projected construction costa
of the new planl bave increased tenfold daring the past decade; fromapo
proximately $400 million to $4
billion, the company explained.
The Northern Indiana Public Service Co. hBS cited almost Identical
construction cost increases in announcing Its decision to acrap plans
for 118 Bailly nuclear power plant
near Dune Acres, Ind., on the shore
of Lake Michigan.
The Washington Public Power
Supply System has suspended construction cost increaaes In an·
,nourictng Its decision to acrap plana
for Its Bailly nuclear power plant
'near Dune Acres, Ind., on the shore
iolLalteMlchlgan.
1 The Washington Publlc Power
ISupply Syatem has suspended constructlon of two nuciMr facilities,
llocated near Richland and Satsop,

Hiking Boots

::~~into as~. well-balanced

Despite Carter's denial sources
confirm CIA-Brandt payoff-L-_Ja_ck_A_nde_rs...;._on

WASHINGTON ~ One Of thenPresident Jtnuny Carter's first international statements, In February
1977, was intended to scotch reports
that lonner West Gennan Chancellor Willy Brandt had received
secret cash paymenla from the CIA
in the 1950s.
The reports had stemmed from an
· allegation - deleted from the book,
"The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence," by Victor Marchetti and
Johh D. Marks - that Brandt had
accepted CIA payola. Brandt had
heatedly denied the charge, and Carl&lt;lt~ld - .or seemed to aay- that it
was both ugroundless" 8nd "reck~ .
less."
But four knowledgeable intelligence . sources have told my
associate Dale Van Alta that Brandt
and the Social Democratic Party he
once led did in fact receive money
from the CIA until at least 11156. One
of the most interesting transactions
occurred in February 1950, and its
detaiiB read like a Hollywood spy
movie scenario.
·
The cover fot the payoff was a
meeting In Berlin of the International Rescue Committee, an
organization founded In 1933 to help
victims of Nazi pe('secution. After

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Several exhibltl0118 will take place
during the cUnlc, be added.

NFL award
NEW YORK ~AP)- The National
Foolball League Man of the Year
conteat began Sept. 8, and contlnuels.l
tbroligb November. Fa111 in each
dty wUJ .vote for their favorites and
the top five flniahera wiU become
· fln8llats. A sporta-medla committee
wUJ tileD select the winner·

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�P~ge-~The Daily Sentinel

Meigs girls open campaign Friday
The Melp Glrla' basketball learn,

bolh reserve and vanity, Will open
their seaaona Friday, November 13,
al.borne against Belpre. The reserve
game will start at5:4G p.m. and the
v_arsity game will start about 7 p.m.
Thia season Ron Logan will again
·serve as vanity mentor while Bonhy
Cbapman will handle the reserve
/:98chlng duties.
.: Both teams for Meigs wiD try to
8).e1J8e their first loss Qf the season
~year at Belpre. The varsity COJ'llo
p1eied the season last year with a 12li record, two wins and one toss
against Belpre, who won the Tri·
Valley conference last year.
.: lmt via graduation lor Meigs

·.

were April King, Shari Drehel and
Andrea Rlgga. Possible starters for
Friday's game with Belpre will be
· rduming starters, Pam Crooks and
Kristen Anderson, both guards, Lyn·
· ne· OUver will start at center and
Laura Smith at one forward. The
other forward will either be Jenny
Meadowll or M.elanie Dillard.
Melanie is returninll varsity member while Jenny moved back to
Meigs last apring.
Players coming from last year's
reserve team will be Paula Swisher,
Cindy Crooks, Paula Horton, Kris
Snowden and Suzan UghUoot. They
. 'will have to contribute to the. team
efforts to make this a successful

·.~ MOC

season.
Coach Logan urgoe everyone to
come out Friday and get this aeason
oil to a good slilrl.

.

All·in all, thinga are looking bright

coaches pick Rio .
to win 1931-82 -eague ·title
.

:; !UO GRANDE - Who's got the others from last year, but we have
· /twnber one basketball tesm in the two quality starters back. Add to
Mid-Ohio Conference In 1981-412? Rio that our strong group of newcomers
Grande College.
andweshouldbeprettycompetitive.
'·,u least that's wbat conference
"We play an aggressive style rl
coaches think. According to a poll of game which means that we'll
MOC coaches at the re&lt;.'ent league probably conunit a lot of fouls and a
riledia day in Canton, the Redmen lot of people will see action. We can
ilre favored to edge past small throw a big· lineup at people or we
college powerfhouse Cedarville and can use a smaller, quick lineup. We
young Walsh squad for the title.
can adjust our personnel to
; Rio Grande was represented at the situ;~lions much better lhan we could
c&lt;inference. media day by Head last year. Look for us to be sir~ng
€oachJohnLawhornandDir~orof downthestretch."
Public Information Scott Miller.
BOB CAWLEY, Urbana, "We're
· Urbana finished fourth in the poll, small in size and we'll rely on seven
Malone fifth, Tiffin University sixth, seniors this year. We have three
Il!t Vernon Nazarene seventh and guards that are probably the finest
Ohio Dominican eighth.
'
in the lineups. I doubt if anybody·in
· tothe potl , the Redm en the con1erence has hr ee better
According
will edge perenuial powerhouse guards than us.
Cedarville, a team tbat went 25-4,
"The ' loss ol Academic All· ·
won the conference and district American Mike Rengert will
~ties and advanced to the NAIA definitely hurt hnl we've got good
Jilational Tournament in Kansas balance that should make up for the
City, Missouri, before faDing to toss. We are an up tempo team Waynesburg of Pennsylvana last one that will score points in bundles.
year. The Yellow Jackets have three
"We have good quickness on of'
of their top six performers returning fense but are weak of{enslvely and
from a year ago, Including 6-5 junior wil probably get killed on the boar·
forward Dave Carr who averaged 14 ds. Shooting is our biggest asset."
pointspergame.
DAN MANLEY, Malone, "We're
The Redmen will rely on IHl Senior ...in a rebuilding situation with seven
. forward Watson McDonald of freslunen, two juniors, and one
Warren, 6-7 freslunan Dan Curry of senior on our roster. W•l6st two key
Derby, and 6-5 forward Kevin lettermen to serious injuries.
CasUeman of Columbus In an effort
"We've recruited very heavily
to knock off the defending champs. locally and we think that we've got a
Tit trio combined for 42 points and really great freshmen group. Most
31 rebounds in the opener.
of the kids come from winnin~ back·
Walsh, who battled the Redmen grounds and we believe we have the

a

I

expected
vie aforyear
theago,
title.is also
The
for secondtoplace
Cavaliers return five lettermen
from a year ago and will have 12
newcomers among their cast in \IIIII·
82.
Each conch presented the state's
media representatives with a caP'
sule summary of tbeir stre1J8ths and
weaknesses In the upcoming season.
Here is what they said.
JOHN LAWHORN, Rio Grande,
"We're very young with 1wo freshmen in lbe starting lineup. But we've
got some newcomers that we think
will turn into outstanding hall·
players.
"Our strength is our inside game.
We like to get the ball off the boards
quick and move it up the floor fast. If
we can't get lhe opportunity on the
break, we have. the ability to be
patient and work the ball for a good
shot.
"In our top 10 players we have
only .one senior, three juniors, two
sophomores, and four freslunen. We
were young last year and we'll be
young this year.
"How fast our younger players
develop will dictate our success.''
DON CALLAN, Cedarville, "Eric
Mounts, our great AII·American
guard and the second leadi1J8 scorer
in Ohio history is gone, but we lhiok
we still bave ·a formidable team. We
lost three of the top six players from
last year's team that went to
nationals, but we still think that we
can play with the best.
"We have three good front .Une
players hack, but we mus1 fill some
holes in the backcourt if we're going
to experience the same success we
had a year ago. We're moving into a
new athletic facility which we fe&lt;Jl is
an added plus."
BOB HUGGINS, Walsh, "We lost
our f'I:OSI Valuable Player and two

Eastern

ft. 8 good girla' cage ·at
MelpHJcblbll,.r.
Followlnl Ia a team n11ter and

schedule.

basis for a sound future.
"We have only one home game
before Christmas and our young
people are going to have to mature
fast if we're going to be successful.
We need to have consistency if we're
going to have a winuing scason."
BUD HARBIN, Mt. Vernon
Nazarene, "We have five returne&lt;Js
back from last year. We have a
good, scrappy type team tbat will be
strong inside.
"We have some people that are
slow on defense which could hurt.
Our goal rignt now is to beat last
year's win output of six."
· BOB HOOOSON, Ohio Dominican;
"We have 19 players on this year's
.quad and 14 of them are freshmen.
We're going to go with a junior var•ity prol(ram lhi• year so that those
who don't play with the varsity wiD
see plenty of action.
"We lost a couple of key returnees
to major injuries which could hurt,
bul r think we have enou~h young
players to fill the holes. How suecessful we will be will be determined
by how fast our young players
mature. We'Ve got some really good ·
freslunerl that we project as our
fu\ure.
"We don't expecl to rattle the
league right away. If we progress
the way I'd likdo see us progress,
we'll be contenders within two
years. We're very quick and we like
to move the ball up the court and
score a lot of points.
Tiffin University declined to send
a representative.

•••·----------~Coo==Unued~==hu~u~~~·~·~~----­

had two and Southwellem one. All
had two players 1illed u honorable

mention.

Eutera'a Nick Leonard waa
named the league's Most Valuable
Uheman.

Coach Logan feels that . the
strength of this year's ballclub will
be Its great depth, size; and·quick·
ness. Early In the season both
shooting and timing wiD be a factor,
especially In the Urning ol offensive
plays.
Practice- and conditioning has
been going on for 8 couple of weeks
now, but team members are still_gel·
ting used to playlns together as a

team.

T~11rsclay,

Thursd•V• November 12, 1"1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

lh. Yr.
U
II

...

u

~
12
...... 12

North Gallla's
Bruce Back
Sblrver. waa·
..eleCted
Most Valuable

center on ~ ·and middle IJI8rd
ondefenle. ·

. Shriver, one Ill the leqae'a top

scorers, played I'UIIIliD&amp; '-II 111 llf.
fense and safety on dele- lor lhe
Pirates. He is a 14S-poundsenlor,

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

DAN'S BOOf SHOP

~rd. ;116-pound senior, played

~II

4-11
W

11
II
U II
W.. II

u

0.10

11

10

:

••.,.
MaeNabmolo
Cathy Dean

~-&lt;

10

BillyJoGordon

M'i

1

"

=~

RL Yr.
10

~

==

~~~

Middleport

Kate the winner
LINCOLN, Mo. (AP) - The final
IICI'immage ot the irainlll8 season
for the Lincoln, Mo., Blue Tigers
was a tug-&lt;&gt;f...,.r with an elephant.
Ei•hl Uncoln players lugged
e
against Kale, a three-ton
pachyderm from the Circus Varga.
Katewoninabest-&lt;&gt;f·lhreeseries.

5-J
..,

9
i

I

~:

5-4

Betty Loftls

CO.ch - Bonny Chapnlln.

1

·
...... MEIGS GIIWI' IWikE'I'8A.LL

samDt1LB

Nov..l3, Belpre; Ngy, 17, At1felalllnvih.Vort;

Nov. 19,Easlem; Kov. ll, Welll&amp;on.
Dec. 3, At JacUon; Dec. 10, Ironton; Dec. li,
At Waverly; r:»c.17, At GllllpoUa.
Jan. 5, Athena; Jan. 7, l.epq: Jan. 14, At
Wellaton; Jan. 11, Jackson; Jan. 11, Al Ironl«&lt;;
Jan. 25, At Eastern; Ju. Jl, NeJ.or!YIJle.YOit.;
Jm. II, Wavelry.
Feb. 1, Al Btlpre; Feb. t, At AU..; Feb. I,
GaDipolb; Fob. II, At Loson.

· '28.99
To Match

.............!~~~~~~~~~~~~
LEE JEANS.

·aoXING

\

The Duily Sentinel

A"'"'"""--.11e.
(UimPSI..._I

=• ·

~~rc;=,;:;,~b,=-~

":n':;

N•Wllf&gt;Oper Publilben AMociaUon, Nllionol
Advertlslns
Representative,
Branham
N . _ Solos,
m 1bln1 Avenue,
10017.
POS'J'MASTER, smfad"""'"' n.. DoUr

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Sentinoi,UlC&lt;ourtSt.,P.,roy,Ohlo"'""·
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SINGLE COPY

MEIGS HI SCHOOL

'lbe . Meigs Marauder Marc:ldns
8aDd ~ a succeallful fallMIICIO
Friday nlgbt at lhe Metg.wa-ly
footbllll game with ID up-beat half.
time abow written and directed by
the 14 aenlors In the band,
ConcratulaUona; senior.
Thia Frldsy,Nov.l3, the band will
meet at 8 p.m. in the bandroom for a
brief rehearsal before playtns between IIBJI*, apprvzlmately
p.m., at the only Friday D1sbt borne
~· beqelbaJI 111!J1e tb1a ·
8aDd I1*Dben wlll be acused lin, mediately following their per-

audlllona are complete.

.-Y

Subscribers not desiring to
thr carrier
may remit in advance ·dl.m.t to The Dally
Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month buil. Credit
will be given carrier eacb month.
No subo&lt;rlptlono by mail permlllod In 1&lt;nma
where home carrier aervlee la .vailab&amp;e.

MAIL SUIISCRIPI'IONS
Oldtaad WatVIqiU

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CLUB, INC.
DATE: NOVEMBER 14th TIME:
SATURDAY 7:30 P.M.

The pickup
that piCks up the
mOstmpg.

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at 4:30p.m. at the firehouse in Tuppers Plains.
The dinner will cost $3.75 per per·
SOil and.the menu will include turkey
and dressing, potatoes and gravy,
n6odles, green beans, cole slaw,
rolls, pie, .cake and tes or coffee.

Mrs. Beulah Ewing is
recuperating from major surgery at
the Holzer Medical Center. Cards
may be sent to Room 330.

p.m. on Nov. 21. Those attending are
to take their own table service and ·a
covered dish. An auction will be held
following the dinner.

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The annual Thanksgiving dinner
ol Racine Grange has been set for 6

The annual lurker diMer of the
Ladies Auxiliary · of the Orange
TOWI18hip Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment will be held Saturday, Nov. 21,

Thinking of picking out a pickup?
If so, 'you'd do well to consider our 1982 Diesel.
Its mileage is fairly impressive, we think, especially since it happens
to be the very best there is for a pickup.
.
·
In fact, it gets an EPA estimated 14..'21 mpg, 49 highway estimate.
(Use "estimated mpg" for comparison. Mileage varies with speed, trip
length, weather. Actual highway mileage will probably be less.)

'399

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"Holiday Fashions
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Introducing the 1982 Volkswag.,n Diesel Pickup.

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· Rev. Henderson delivered the
·
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Jacobs, Colwnbus, spent the weekend with Mrs.
- 'l'lnll Jacobs and aUended church
· services at·the local church.

and Ed Hartieu, Doug Hill wlshe8
to thank band parents and boosters
for their many hours ol dedicated . ·
support; the lime apent transporting
sons IUid daughters to and from
practlc:el and performances Is appreciated. "Without your help," .H ill
adds, ""e could not have survived .
and bad such a success!~ season.
'Oiank you."
When uked to name a high point
of the season, Hill mentioned the
band lnvitsti01181, held In SepteJIIber, which he hopes will become
a lraditional, annual event.
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For the upcomlllg . basketball ' " ··· ... . .
· season, volunteers are sttll needed
for the band !Joosters refreshment · ·
stand. To help, call Pat Thoma, 11112•· · . ,.,
·'llT'I, or return the allp sent home
with all band members.
Future events acheduled for the
. ·bond Include the following: Nov. 20,
·dance by the music club In the
: cafeteria, 10.12:30; . Dec. 13, high
· ·school Cllttstmaa chorat concert;
. and Dec. 17, junior b18h school band
and choir concert.

IlL l411&amp;1MIA

Action

the

Spray
SPECIAL

PRICES GOOD
THROUGH MONDAY

Nice

St!JISHER LOHSE
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Lifestyle
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On bebalf &lt;tall the band members

COAL&amp;
WOOD ONLY

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AND

8 at

- even11J8 sennon.

Marl~ne Thompson, the former
f,larlene Wolfe, has illldergone
surgery at Mercy Hospital in Colwnbus. Cards may be aent tO Room 213.

00
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Free Methodiat Church was 92.
Cbolr members present were 14. Mr.
· and Mn. Larry Clark aang two duets
· Sunday even11J8. Bob and Patty Bar. ton tWig ri duet Sunday morning.

Auditioning for the symphonic
baild ill continuing. 'lbe results will
be polled In tbe bandroom !fben the

.i ..............

BOTH

.Personals

. Altelldance November

giving the prayer. Jean Wright alao at the chun:ll.
Welc&lt;med as ._ members were
read an article from Prayer Focus
about Brull.
Eva Rolilon IUid Genevieve Waril.
Officet'll' ~ !Jere Civen and Suun Mllb Pui1lnl ,.. a 9111tor. ·
Mn. Jacobe reported 01) the .-u Ill The ciGIIIII8 prayer was Clven by '·
a local famU,y. 'lbere was apedaJ ,Mrs. Wrigbl. Next meetinc will be
llllllic by Sharon Folmer wllb Bren. wllb Wanda Eblin on Dec. 8.. Mrs.
da Baggy giving the program. 1bere Muh and I~ Powell llll'lled refresb.
will be a work meetmg In December ments.
.

·.Announcements_ __

LARRY MORRISON GYM

Dally . .. ...... ' ..... . ..... . .... 15 Cel'lb

1

A Tlwnbclving donat1111 to the
Olive Bnncb Harne was made when
the Laurel Cliff Women's
Mlsli01181)' Fellowship InternatiCnal
met 11 the borne Ill Mrs. Ann Muh.
Karen stanley bad the devotirinl
with Dannl Gilmore readiD8 scripture frOm Luke and Mildred JaC1lbs

!lUI

PRICES

!Month
SIImonth

Donation to Olive Branch Home '

l-.;. )

Mulllmedla, Inc.,

=~':'!1~:.:: ~ clau

~~ ~~~

Meigs
aand Notes

fonnance. ·

r.:=:;;::::;======:;-1
Pul&gt;llohlng

Ohio

•=•7

lADIES DENIM JACKETS

~~ r~----1;~

UnderStew~rt

Cathy llel.oog

,.

Lee

Nove111btr 12, 1981

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Daily Sentinel ,

Pom~roy-Middleport,

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These youngsters work on preparing the Iitle page for their books.
Crayons, markers, charcoal , pastels, and paints were av8ilable for their

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u•e through the project funding from the Youth Projccl8 of the Nationol
Endowment for the Humanities.

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Social Calendar

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It's n(lt everyone who can wril2
and illustrate a book!
But the approximately 40
youngsters enroDed In a cultural arts program carried out over the past
month with funding from the
National Endowment for the
Hwrtanities, did just that.
The concluding session of the four·
. week program was beid Monday at
the Middleport Libr~ With the
children writing, iUustrating and
binding their own books.
Emphasis of the program for the
youngsters, aged eight to 14, was on
creating a greater appreciatioo of
the books they read and the art
which enhances those books.
Titled "More than Worlds Can
Say: The Rest of the Story of
Books," the objectives of the
program have been to develop an understanding of art forms found in
children's literatur~. and to give the
children the opportunity to produce
at least one art work at each of the
sessions at the type which can be
found in a published children's book.
The after-school program was
conducted by EDen BeD, librarian;
Patty Ansbe~k, reading motivator,
and three volunteers, Margaret
Johnson, Missy Coleman, and Mary
Bryant.
.
From the $5,000 grant, books by

POMEROY LODGE 164,
F&amp;AM, will meet at 7:30 this
evening at the hall with work in
the feliowcraft degree.
PUBLiC HYMN sing each
night through Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at Racine Wesley United
Methodist Church; singers,
Voices of Liberty, Tuesday; local
.church talent bn Wednesday, and
''Sunrice'' on Thursday.

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

VIDEO SEMINAR, teaching by
word of faith, Bible school,
Friday at 7 p.m. Featuring Fred
Price. Christian Fellowship, 383
North Second Ave., Middleport.
. A THANKSGIVING can·
dlelight service with communion
will be held Friday night at the
Reedsville United Methodist
Church, 7 p.m. Local talent will
present s~cial music for the ser~
vice.
BAKE SALE Friday from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. at Dale C. Warner
building. Sponsored by Forest
Run United Methodist Church.
REVJVAL now in progress at
Laurel Cliff Free MethOdist Church through Nov. 15 at 7:30 p.m.
nightly. Pastor Rev. Robert
Miller invit~ the public to at·
tend.

EVANGELiNE Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star, will
have installation of officers at the
Thursday 7:30 p.m. meeting at
the Middleport Masonic Temple.
Members are to take a covered
dish for a potluck dinner.

MEIGS COUNTY COON HUNTERS Friday at 7 p.m. on Snowbali Hill. Thanksgiving dinner ,
will be served and 1982 dues
coilected.

PRECEPTOR CHAPTER of
Beta Sigma Phi Thursday at 7:45
p.m. Riverboat room at Diamond
Savings and Loan.

THE MEIGS COUNTY
Coonhunters will meet at 8 p.m. '
Friday at the,ciubhouse 011 Snowball Hill for a turkey dinner. Dues
will be collected.

ELEANOR CIRCLE OF Heath
United Methodist Church Thurs·
day at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Donna Jenkins, Rutland. Those
needing .transportation to be at
the church at 7:10p.m.

CHEESE AND sausage sale ali
this week by Eastern High Band.
Contact any band member, band
booster member or Director
James Wilhelm, 980-4379, to or-

ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE,
7:30p.m. Thursday at the Grange
hall.
EVANGELINE CHAPTER,
Order of the Eastern Star, 7:30
Thursday night at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. Instaliation of
officers.

der.

BOOK FAIR underway at
Salem Center Elementary
School. Books may be purchased
at Saturday's fall festival in the
gymnasium, Saturday, 4to 9 p.m.
Variety of books offered with
profits to go for classroom sup-

national meet
Veterans Memorial Hospital

D!nictor of Pharmaceutical Se,._.
vlces,.Jon Guinther ws one of more
than 200 pharrnaclsll attending
HPI's fourth National Meeting in
Newport Beach, Calif. in October.
Also attending the meeting from
Verera111 Memort.l was SaDy
Gloeckner, R.N., IV Therapy
Specialist.

Hosp;tal news
Yderul Memoria!H•pltal
Admitted··Doria
Spencer,
Pomeroy; Clara MIUer, Pmleroy.
Discharged-Brian Bass, Ennna
Yoho, Dianne Roach, Alice MU!s,
Margaret• Ramey, Jesse Swan,
Hazel FelTeD.

READING MOTJV ATOR- Patty Allhe&lt;k, reading
motivator for the art project, demonstrated the
rechnique of how to cover the back ot·a book. Eacb

BUy

techniques in illustrations.
The children worked with
collages, marbelized paper, pastels,
charcoal, pencil, and painl3, pen aQ.d
ink. At each session the use of a different media was explored and
books with iUustrations showing that
technique were studies.
The authors included Ezra Jack
Keal'l, Leon Lionni, Rajankovsky,
Brian Wiidarnith, Tasha Tudor,
Robert Kraus and Brinton Turkle.
SAME HOURSAnd as a follow-up to the actual art
·SAME LOCATION
work by the children enrolled in the
program, Brinton Turkle will be
Phone 992-2971
corning to Middleport on Thursday,
Nov. 19. He wiD be talking about 1-----------~
writing and illustrating books,
giving actual demonstrations .
Turkie's presentation will take place
in the Middleport Elementary
School attendance at 4 p.m. Parents,
eachers, and school-aged children
are invited to attend.
Born in AUiance, Brinton Turkie
began drawing as a child and after
studying theater at the Carnegie Institute of Te&lt;hnology, and art at the
School of Boston Museum,of Fine Ar·
18, be .began lliustraling ·textbooks,
later turning to illustrating
children's books.
Now residing in Santa Fe, Turkle's
philosophy about children's books Is
that "The words should make you
want to look at the pictures, and the
pictures should make you want to
look at the words."

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Taetday IIIPt. wu accepted by JUDeii Jolinsoa, pmtdeat ef .-RadDe

GUa Club, reclpleat of ll!e award.

AwartlS~..

No.., ~ou can re~ 1U 1i.1
&lt;:A the llri1inel SUPER

HEROES In a epeeial

or

oollertor.' ...... ~·t·
lookin11 plutleeupt.

SUPERMAN •w,

BATMAN"'. ROBIN••,
WOND~R WOMAN •~,

BHAZAM•w, THE FLASH""tt.ey'.., eJIJw,. in ueitillll:
full-rnk&gt;T l"aphin. j\Wl u they
appear in 1M romb,. So .tart yeur
rollectinn tod...y , Brinll' kcNnla
dilr..rent orw&gt; e..:h week.

Bradford named to post
Wallace Bradford, 44060 Sunny
Hollow Road, CoolviUe, · was apP,'IIn~ tpday as jury ~oner
replacing the late Freeland Noni.a.
Bra,UO.d, son of the late W!Utam
M. and Helen Howell Bradford was
born at Thomas Fork in Salisbury
Townahip. He married Muriel
Whaley in 1938. They are the parents
of three children, Bruce Bradford,
retired Ueutenant Col. of the U. S.
Anny, Caroline Ketchka and Nita
MitcheD.
Bradford was employed for
several years at Red Anchnr, Elber·

McCLURE'S
15;' EAST IIAIII ST.
I'OM£JD¥', ON.

· TO THE VOTERS
.OF MEIGS COUNTr
the many individuals
organizations who so
ngly supported the
uberculosis
Levy
~~~~e~::•· we extend our
thanks.

Bradford is along time member of
the Isaac Walton League and has
been a member of the Meigs County
Fair Board for the past 15 years.

.

The Tuberculosis
Board of Trustees
and office staff.

the Ohio Divison of WUdlife. He was
· a member of the American Legion,
., Edward (Ted) Dean, 54, ~ Home 40 et 8 and the Athens Boat and. Ski
Street, Alhens, died Wednesday Club.
He is survived by his wife, An- .
morning at Doctors Hospital,
nabelle Dean; one son, Michael
Columbus, foDowlns a brief lllness,
Mr. Dean was the son of the late Dean at h(IJlle and one daughter,
Edward and Ethel Anthony Dean. Rhea Dean Hopotetter, Nelsonville.
He was a graduate of Athens High · Funeral services will be · held
School and aUended Ohio Unive,._. Saturday at I p.m. at the Hughes
sity. ile was member of the Coast Funeral Home, Athens, with the
Guard during World War II and a Rev. Cluirles Poston ' officiating.
Burial will be in Clarks Chapel
f~er Athens PoUceman. At the
Ume of his d~th he was the Ceinetery. Friends may caD at the
education offlcer 'lrf district four for funeral home after 2 p.m. on Friday.

a

P.d. Pol. Adv .

Pudding or Gelatin
and Beveroge

Plan 'return to nursing' program

(-milk)

Dinners also Include ...
• All-You-Can-Eat
SaladBar
•
·,•Baked Potato
• Warm Roll with Butter

THANKSGIVING FAVORS
You'll be all ready .
for cold weather
in your Morgan Quinn® .
wann winter boots.
Lots ot styles and
coloN\ to choose from .
Hurry in lodayl

.On Tuesday, Nov. zt, the Depart·
ment of Nunlnil Services of
Pleuant Valley Hoapital and
Pleasant Vlllley Nurslnc Care Unit
wiU be sponaorlng a "Return to Nursing" lunc'-tand program tour for

,

slnBSerVices.
Any registered nurse who may be
interested in re-entry into Nursing
practice at this time or In the future
ll,lld would like to attend this informative program llhould call the
~rvi~"

Upp• li11r ld.

structured
to acquaint
nurses with
Pleasantregistered
Valley

(ICroa frDm 1~1 Airport)

,. H01pilal and the Department ofNur-

.~:·.

Cillllpolls, -GIIio

provided forofthisPleasant
program Valley
by the
Auzlliary
Hospital.

Patrolprobesdee~~mishaps

The origina 1 heavyweight
un-washed Levi Jeans.

t.,e caNieer accidents were in- The deer continued on after
• : va11ptec1 by the Glllla-Melgs Poet atrlklng Han't.s' veblcle, and the car
• c1 the alate highway patrol Wed- llilfered moderate danilge.
illllday.
Charlu R. 'l'lmml, 38, Rt. I,
The pmo1 aid Sldrley J. Harrla, Gem~. wu 1111bnwld on U.S. 35
;,. .. Raedlville, wu drlvin8 south- a1 8:10p.m. whell hla vehlclutruclt
• bounll on Rt. 7 In Mei&amp;B County at a deer ruruiln&amp; on the roadway,
~ t;40 a.m. wbln blr ear lllruck a deer .. canting moderate danilge.
.-l wblcll had 1'1111 tram the rilht llde of

Naw For
Christm•

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&lt; •

Wllson pleads guilty to charge
' lalapb L wu.aa •• Ill e plee of
" 11t111tr 1o e c1tar11t1 alii 'dnl ud

MARGUERITE SHOE

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JlfliO. 8loCiiL

'GIIIIIIIJ, OIL

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flARES
STRAIGHT LEG

Also Student Sizes

NEW YORK

CLOTHING HOUSE

Gunman attempts to kill official
PARIS - Alone gunman of "Middle Eastern type" fired seven shots
today at U.S. Charge d'Nfaires Christian Chapman outside the
'diplomat's Paris apartment, the U,S. Embassy .said. The bullets
missed their mark and the gunman escaped on foot.
Chapman ducked behind his car and escaped the hail of bulle18 that
left at least two holes in the rear of the vehicle, which was not annor
plated, authorities said.
"My firat reaction was one of surprise. I thought, why me? You read
about these kinde of things in the newspapers, but you never think it Is
going to happen to you," Chapman said,

,~

Tass criticizes Reagan remarks
MOSCOW - Snviet papers gave prominent display today to a Tass
news agency charge that President Reagan's remarks oq the
. possibility of a limited nuclear war in Europe were "nuclear black·
mail~' aimed at achieving Washington's foreign policy goals.
Reagan's statement, first made last month and repeated at a news
conference Tuesday, set off a storm of protest in Western Europe and
. has been repeatedly condemned by Soviet media.

[;jfA'(fJ
ANI) GIT'

IOOD

Rio officials to present program
' RlO GRANDE - Representatives individual vocational needs of the
from the Rio Grande CoDege and people who attend.
Conununity CoDege Educational .
Anyone in the area who is in·
Counseling Center wiD present a terested in finding out more about
program Wednesday, Nov. 18, at 10 opportunities for their future are
a.m. at the Middleport Public welcome to attend. ·
Library.
For further information, contact
The program is for any com- the Counseling Center at (614) 24&gt;munity residents who are interested 5353.
in job opportunities, training and r------------1
education once a GED is achieved.
The program will center around the
YIHir ''Extr• Touch "

6 Month Money Market Rote

13.161%

Substantial pj)na tty for early wilhdrawaf.

~biSlno,. I!Sl

Squad calJed
The Racine Emergency Squad
was caUed to Township Road 97 at
11:22 p.m. Wednesday to admlniater
aid to Tooty Arnott who was treated

FLORIST
PH. 992-2644

3RD ST., RACINE, OH.
Member FDIC

352 E. Main, Pomeroy

t

SCENIC HILLS
NURSING CENTER
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·1911d-

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Levrs

Muon, GaWa and Melp area.
Hoepltal, 30W75-4340, extension 2411 .
aU~red-fromtheN~~~~~r~a;t;ho;m;e;·========~~~~~Y~o~ur~F~T~D~F~I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!~~~~~~~~!!~~~!~~
The program and tour will be . "Bilbyalltlng
wiD be

,

OH.

Rite.

:. Edward Dean
,.
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of Directors, held at the Western Sizzling Steak House. Guest speaker
was BrHXton Teward of the Ohio
Association.

PH. 992-6669

felds and New York Central
Hailroad. He retired from the
Western and Sollthe111. Insurance
Agency in 1975 after 'll years of ser·
vice.
· .
He is a member of Hemlock Grove
Chrlatlan Church and is also a member of Hemlock Gnnge. He is af·
filiated with York Rite, Masonic
Bodies, P(IJlleroy, and the Scottl8h.

·Area deaths

' C6tnjj}ete ~ith

VILLAGE PHARMACY

(Continuedf!Oillpagel)

Columbia

'REOPENED

e NAPKINS
e·PAPER PLATES
e.CANDLES
eCARDS

·

award was presented to James-and elividual; Gneglein and Holcomb
Mary Hufbnan. ·They own and who tied . for ~d place from.
. SHUTTLE I.JFroFF- Tbe space sbullle ColiUD- bla Wts off the pad at KeDDedy Space'Cenrer'l'bursday.
operate a 350 acre fann in Chester Meigs High School and to Mike
(AP Laoerpbolot.
Township. The Goodyear Out· Henry, third place individual from
standing Cooperator Award was Southern High School in the soH
presented to Joe BaUey by John judging contest held Sept. 29 at the
(coiiiinuect from page I)
Fultz of the Meigs Tire Center on VirgO and Tom Hanun !ann in Sui·
···--------------------~~~~~~~~~-----------bebalf of the Goodyear Tire and ton Township.
•National Aeronautics and Space Ad· from about 78 to 138 miles above the
rockets.
~bller Co. BaUey owns a 240 acres
Mflllate membership certificates
globe, the final thnist provided by
. At 52 seconds, the spaceship ministratioo ships waited to recover
!ann and alao has an additional 200 . went to Reuter-Brogan Insurance, J.
maneuvering engines. The
pushed through one of the most them forreuse.
·acres rented In Rutland Townohip. D. Orilllng and Supply Co., Karr ·dangerous points in the flight - an
astronauts later were to raise both
'!'he dfslrlct conservation wUdiHe Construction Co., Buckeye Rural area known as Mu Q, where the
As the ship ·accelerated, its the high and low points to 157 nniles.
award went to the Racine Gun Club Election, Jaymar Coal Co., :J..R In- craft was subjected · ~o maximum · astronauts were pressed hard again·
Launch was 2 hours, 40 nninutes
with James Johnson, president·, ac- dustries, Racine Home-National dynamic pressures generated by a st their couches by gravity forces later than the originally scheduled
cepting.
Bank, Landlnark and the Fanners
combination of speed and wind three times those experienced on dawn liftoff - delayed while
A trophy went to the Meigs High Bank and Savings Co. for their
earth. Driven by their main liquid· technicians raced the clock to fix a
shears.
School FFA soU judging team con- donations to the district.
·
Two minutes 7 seconds after lif· powered engines, they moved ever faulty spaceship data processing
A slide procram of the past year's toff, Colwnbia shed the two 149-foot faster as they penetrated into the system with a part scavenged from
si8tlng of Greg Bolen, Bill Holcomb,
~e Goegleln and Jamet Carsey
conservation achievements was
the shutUe's half·bullt siste~ ship in
boosters, burling them toward a thinner upper air.
with Carsey accepting the award presented by Habert First, district
California. Repair was completed
After
about
12
minutes,
Colwnbia
planned parachute · landing in the
given by Landmark. Awards also conservationist.
this morning just after midnight and
settled
into
an
initial
orbit
ranging
Atlantic aboot 160 nniles offshore.
went to Bolen, high scoring inthe signal flashed to start the final
countdown hours.

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WJUJLIJI'E AWAKD- A division uf wildlife award lor eo• 1 vatloll
preHDted by Mille llqddk, left, at lbe amni8l meetbi1 uf lbe Melp SWCD

IS BEING

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YOIIIIpler enroUed wrow blJI own book ud thea
covered the back with oolorful fabric .

r-.:_---------------.,----,-----

Attends meeting
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Philson and
Mrs. Dwight Waliace were in Athens
recently for a
of the South
East Ohio
Board

were ._. to

Take part in

studied during
the program r----:-;:-----.:
· __
authors
were purchased
and wiD
now be .
placed in the library. How the
.
illustrations enhanced the story was

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Gary Lee .W8J1119', 35, Rt. I, Shede,
and Bonnie Sue Wood, 22, Rt. I, iAlng
Botlom; Rodney Keith BaUey, 23,
Rt.l, Middleport, llldCheryiDenise
Barnhart, 22, RD, Middleport.

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The Dally Sentinei-Page-7

Ohio

Marrialle

lHE POMEROY
PASTRY SHOP

Friday

Thursday

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Pomeroy-Midclle~rt,

Issue licenses

discussed as well as the various

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Thursday, November 12, 1981

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Thursday, Novembu 12, 1981

Ohio

Middleport
youths
write
books
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P~ge-6- The

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pllced Clll two ,.,.
fGIIowliiC
the liill*lllon

al hla - - of sill manthl to five

, . , . ... pelll) lllllltutlon•

. ID tbt -

COiirl the marr1a11e al
M'* 11e1b llolnn llld Jllljleh
EdWM'd Bow• a. nwu dlllolvld.

536 Buckridge Road

614-446-7150

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

. THE NEW CONCEPT IN NURSING CARE
e Bright surroundinp with the decorator touch
• Sem~Private
and Private Living Accommodations
'
• Spacious Dining Faclities
e Medicaid ApprMd
e Ex~ Nu~ Staff with 24 hour coverage
• Full Time Actillitr llnltb and Social Service·Diractci
• PIIJ*al lhei'IPJ and Podiaby Services
·

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�Pag~r-8- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

Thursday, November 12, lfll

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Lakers snap losing streak with v1ctory
liY n.e AUO&lt;Ialed Press

seconds left for the winning points.
"We anticipaled thai anything
around Kareem (Ahdui.Jabbar)
would be jBilUTled up and we didn't
wantto rlak a turnover."
Nixon, who scored eight points in
the game, aaidheshouldhavehada
layup.
In other NBA action, It was ·
Philadelphia 117, Chicago INJ;
MilwaukeeiOO,NewJersey88; SeatUe 107, Dallas 79 and Boston 115,
Kansas City 100.
· Ahdui.Jabbar led the L8kers wilh
21 points.
76ers117, Bullsll0
JuliusErvingscored2lpointsand
Darryl Dawkins added 18 to lead
Philadelphia past Chicago, lhe
76ers' sixth victory in seven games.
The saers never trailed in the

Th~ Los Angeles Lskers had lost

three straight games - and figured
that three was enough.
" We all sat around and talked
before the game," said Earvin Johns&lt;in, refel'fing to a locker room
discussion before Wednesdsy night's
National Basketball Association
contest wilh the Houston Rockets.
"We all made a commitment about
the lhlngs we had to do. Nwnber
One, we had to play good defense ... "
They did just that, and got some
clutch shooting from Norm Nixon as
weUtobeattheRockets!ll).93.
" Thefinalplay workedalmost to
perlection, but we thought Norm
might get a layup," Los Angeles
coach Paul Weslhead said about
Nixon's 20-foot shot with aeven

•

•

oneslded game and opened their llr!dleman field pl.
·
'l't. Maverlcb' Mark Aguirre led wilh Bird, Kevin McHale, Rick
Robey, Gerald Her.daMI• and Nate
biggesllead, 21 points, with 7:0ito
8Mielll'l,lla'Nrieb7t ·
ai!JCC~:enwith26poinlll.
Archibald 1111 the caurt for Baltcn,
go in the g8me on a basket by raerLonnie SbeltGn ICOred 11 points
Cebles 111, llllp Ut
ve Ollie Johnson for a 101·73 ad- and Jack Slkma bad 17 u Seattle
Larry Bini scared 30 po1n11 and the Cel!icl played aar-iwl)' on
vantage.
beat Dallu and banded the
Robert ParWl lidded :11 to pace defenle and 1'111 off 121traigbt polnll
Orlando Woolridge bad IIi points to Mavericks their •
llralght
llolkln over KaMM CUy, the ID~minutel.
cun Roblalon led Kanaas caty
lead the Bullil, while Reggie Theus defeat. The Sonlao 104* the lead in
Celtlal'flfthstraJchtvlctory.
ad!led 13 and Artis Gilmore had 11.
the middle of the lirll qlllrier and
IWIIU City led ll&amp;«i with 10 with 21 points and Reggie IQac adBucb 100, Nell88
led tbe real of the way.
'l)lnutel remalnJDC in the gljllle, but ded 2Jfor the KingS.
Bob Lanier scored 20 point&amp; and
_;;_~------------:-Junior Bridgeman contributed 16 to
Uf!MUwaukeeoverNewJersey.
The Bucka broke into a 61.00 lead
after a 4l).4l; halftime tie with help .
.
.
.
.,,
"
from Mickey Johnson's five points.
Thell-pointmarginwastheBucks'
.
~·
largestoflhegame.
The Nets ran Into serious ·foul
· .
.
'
·
.
trouble late in the contest.
._,
Milwaukee's final15 points came en- '"========="T::::::;:;:::::;;:::=;-:=;;:"::'T--------"lr:;.;;;:;;;;.;;~~;:'
tlrely .on free throws except for one I·
54 Misc. Merchlln41ce
Real ESIIM - Gonoral

r----..---------.;_
____
s
· .; ,._

'I
mall ··n··ve·s ·tme·.nt, arge ..
• w. ant
. Ads .,
retu
· rns· sen·tme
LAFF- A - DAY '

~·.

~·0
E l

,
- ~ :'·V'·q

_;;_:,
'

,., _ ,~

~. ;~: -· :.,_, ., :
. i' :~
/

'

,i

-

•

..,.J:-...... __ .... :;.,,. ·-

• •

·· ~ - - · -

• 10\.

''Gel a Sl'Cond opinion iC you
Herb. but you ·~ be craZy
invtsl all your availablr
into A\'me lndustrits ."

Card., Thonko
The Family of Amon
Rutherford would like to
Inank frlondo and neigh·
llorS of Eaat Galllpollo lor
flowers, thoughlfullneso,
and conalderatlon. At tl1e
time of hll death.

Gall'- Co. Area Code
614

•

E. Main. .
POMEROY,O.
992-2259
OWNER HAS REDUC·
ED THE PRICE RACINE . AREA - A
real country home on

985-Chllsttr
34J-Portland

446-2342

Gerald.

ARTEX AND . TRI·CHEM

his merged. Book a class
and ~t Christmas Jtems
painted. Allee Nease. 985·

3942.

~orses ; · ponies,
horse
trailer, riding lesons. Hoof

lull

on the property of Earle
and Marybelle Schultz off
SR6811n Reedsville, Ohio.

•

NO hunting or trespassing
on Fred Johnson-Dale
Casto -Farm· L..eased by
Leroy ROU~h .

base-

ment, carport, fully insulated, and forced air
gas heat. Now$39,000 .
OLDER

POMEROY

Real Estate

General
- ----

LANDMARK

RGIL B. SR .
216 E. Second Street

room home on 12 acres

of land on State Rt.

Bath, · city water,
natural gas heat and one
outbuilding in Racine

Pu.bllc Saie
&amp; Auction

School District.
NEW LISTING - One

AUCTION

level acre Ideal for gardening . Large garage
42x36 arid a 2 bedroom
home with hot air furnace, bath, nice carpeting, basement, porches located at Tuppers
Plains. Will sell onJime.

. Continuing
with
our
..
.

CHRISTMAS SALE
ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALE BARN
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1981

loose ball in the first period of Wednesday's New Jer. sey Neii-MII.waukee Bucks NBA ganie at the Byrne

Arena In East Rutherford, N.J. From leftarellleNets'
Jan van Breda Kollf and the Bucks Pat &lt;;nmmtng1 aDd
HarveyCalchtngs (42). (AP L8serpboto) •

Ohio SportJisht

Fremont ace eyes law degree
By GEORGE S:J'RODE
AP Sporlti Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Tony

cinnati Woodward.
It was so cold at the Springfield
South-Xenia game Friday night that
Gant, Fremont Ross' quarterback, t~e combined bsnds took only 60
has more in mind than playing foot- seconds to play lhe national anthem.
ball in college.
Centerville, under Coach Bob
"Athletics will not intefere with Gregg, won its seventh straight
my goals. Football is jtist a way of Western Ohio League crown.
getting there," said the 6-foot-2, 111.'&gt;Pomeroy Meigs Coach Charley
pound Gant, who plans visits to Ohio Chancey now has 100.triumphs. Skip
State, Michigan and Penn State.
Baughman, St. Marys coach for 24
Gant, however, says he is not con- seasons, owns a 174-8.'J..7 career
fined to the big-time college powers. ' record, including his fourth unHe would consider the Ivy League beaten regular season in lhe last
schools, for example, in pursuit of a five .
law career.
Delphos Jefferson started three
Around Ohio: Macomber wUI face Wilson brothers, Jim, John and
St. John's Sunday for lhe Toledo city Chuck, in its No. I backfield this
league championship. Walnut Ridge season. Jim ran for 1,356 yards and
has replaced playoff-hound East- caught 15 passes for 410 more yards.
moor in the Colwnbus city title
game against Beech croft Friday.
Jeff Dinan, a split end and safety

for Zanesville Rosecrans, scored
lhree tonchdowns in less than five
minutes in a 3+0 rout of Buckeye
Trail. The senioncaught passes of 25
and 26 yards ·and returned a punt 67
yards. He also lhrew for two extra
points in that span.
Canton McKiniey Is savoring its
first unbeaten regular season since
191i6, when the Bulldogs were The
Assoclaled Press' state poll cham. pion. Hamilton Badin's Terry
Malone has 200 career coaching victories after a 21.() decision over Cln-

Transactions
WecbleMI.y'•S,Orll Tn...cUoDI
ByTbt AINdakd Prftl

.................
BASEBALL

CIOCAGO WHITE soX-Signed Tony
Laftulu, mana1er, to a two-year contNct, .00 Rolan:l Hemond, vice presldrfnHienertl lnlnlger, to a dlree-year
cmtract. Named Charley Una bding

-"

CUIIS-8-

N•_.J..eque

CI0(4\GO
Je..,. Mo.
raJea, outfielder, to a two-year contract.

No__ .......
O'OO'I'IW.l.

WASHINGTON
REDSKINS ...... Actlvated
Mille Rat, ~. and L.ea.rll
ulely.
Bob Rabo, light
tlld Ploc:ed Cl!rla CIUiy, Nitty, on tho

MdJonl&lt;l,

in.-...... -

Walnd

.

u.t.
IIOISBV

No--.......

CALGARY

Fl...AMES- Tnded
Brad
- . . , . _ . . , . lo lbe PhJlodelphto
Jl'bww for Mel lll1dplln, cen\el'.
PIULADELPHIA
rLYERI- Racllled
Pello Ll 2 ~~· hrn
U.:,.:="roN
br.fl!i!AUJ-N•med

*"'" ..

11rJ10 IIDITIY hoof ....:b.

I

/

GARAGE APT. - Nice

2 ca,- garage with apt.
over. Has bath. furnace,
equipped kitchena and
enclosed porCh. Want

All brand new In boxes.
TOYS-TOYS-TOYS and misc. New
bicycles, bicycle accessories, jersey
gloves, fine Indiana glass, brown ware
glass, lots of Christmas miscellaneous
items.
.
'
TERMS: Cashorcheck'twifhiD
Restaurant Open
Auctioneer: Richard Gardner
FREE Turkey will be given away.

only Sl7 .soo.
3 LEVEL ACRES - '01
good truck . land. 4
bedroom . country hOme,
hot water furnace, nice

birch

· wood·

kllc~en,

burner, large wOOdshed

locat&amp;d on 338.
11 ACRES - on Rt. 7
near Chester. Can be
Pivided Into lots. Trailer
or bulldlhg. Also an old 7
room house and a 12x52
two bedroom trailer. All

.... __________ .....

- 1..- --·--· ---.

I

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

On defense, he intercepted seven
passes as a safety.
I
Four players had viral en1
cephalitis and eight olhers lhe flu so
Marlington called off its game with ·
Mogadore Field last week.
Marlington's Todd Stanish luid his
sec~nd straight I ,000-yanl rushing
season with 1,152 yards in nine ·
games.
.
··Ironton's winning streak has
Write your own ad and order by mall with this
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you get
reached 43 contests for regular
results. Money not refundable.
season play. Dennis Bacon needed
just II rushes for 267 yards and six
Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
touchdowns, aU in the first half of a
54-!9 victory over WeUston. He
wound up with 1,135 yards rushing
Addressi--------;..
and 28 touchdowns. George Grant of
Phone _____________
McDonald had a 1,409-yard rushing

season.

for $32,000. '
WE WILL TAKE CARE
OF YOUR REAL
ESTATE SELLING.
CALL 992-3176, HELEN
&amp; GORDON T.EAFORD
AND SUE MURPHY.

John McEnroe; bidding to win the
$175,000 Benson and Hedges Tennis
Championships for the fourth
straight year, eliminated ,John
Feaver of Britain 6-1, 6-1 to advance
to the second round.
In olher matches, Jinuny Connors
swept' past Tom Gullikson 11-4, 6-2;
Britain's Ricbanl Lewis posled a 6-4,
6-1 over llie Nastase, who was fined
$400 for using indecent language on
court; Roscoe Tanner topped Tim
Mayotte 6-1, 11-4; Tim Wilkison beat
Jeff Borowiak U, 6-3, &amp;-2; and Sandy Mayer overcame Gianni Ocleppo
6-3, U,&amp;-1.
.TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) - Mark
Edmondson of Australia beat Tony
Graham 6-1, 11-4; while Bill Scanlon
downed fellow American Chris
Mayotte &amp;-7, 6-3, &amp;-2 in the $75,000
Taipei International Cham·
pionships.
In other action, Van Wlnltsky upaetJohaSadri6-4,U,&amp;-l; and Chris
Dunk . defuted Brad Drewett of
Australia 11-3, &amp;-2.
TOKYO (AP) - The top seeded
Uniled states team and ranked
squads from siJ: other nati0111 won
their way Into the q~ at
the IIIII Federatlan Cup - ·8
champkilshlp.
The _Americans swept put Spain

;

1-f"U~Ic

Golf
NAPA, Calif. (AP)- Jeff Sanders :
fired a 4-undeJ: par • fill' a 117 total
and held a !wHbot lead going 111to
the final round of the t47,5GO Northem Callfomla Open.
,
Tied for aecond at Ia&amp; were Rod
.Funaeth, Dale Riley and Stan Souza.

Baseball
NEW: YORK (AP) - Fernando
Valenzuela of the Los Al!ielel
Dodien. the -1141111 MGican
left.bander wbo tacit ba hall "'
storm Ill bill l'lllllde WV", WU
nllll8d the . Natlana1 l..eepe'a. Cy
YOUIJI Award wmn.r.

utility bills. $21,000.

HANDYMAN SPECIAL

3 · room hoUse and

2. _

Small lot. Minersville

, wltl1 fireplace and grill,
•lull basemenland 2 car
: sarage . Intercom,

PRICE REDUCED
DRASTICALLY - New

' custom drapes and ac·

area. $4,000.

3. _ _ _ __
4. _ _ __ _

5. - . , . . . - - - - ' - -

'·-----7, _ _ _ __
··-----'·----10.
_ _ _ _ __
11. --,....,.--:-,;--

12:

------,-

1~. -~--'-~

14.
15.
-:_
- -_
- _16. _-_
_

21- lusiiNIIS

bedrooms, full basement, . and a family
room . Price cut · to

S.rvlcn

..

,.-....,...,., ,,
r.rs•~

992-6191
ASSOCIATES

Jean Trusseii949·2UO
Roger Turner H2·5692

~rner992-5692

~'.,"''"'

....

Privacy In town on three

'I

. ·'

.

fill NY..,.,.. I"'II!Utten
lunfty t :• lt'.M. ,,.,,,

•nc1

41 - Hous•• tor Ront

--

Restock,-..rtt- etc.
I
OrderOunt10%
Above Wholnale •

STUART. WAYNE

PULLINS

Call Altere P.M.
m-7656

11-12-1 rno.

.'

I

I,

1.
I

'

.,'

Farm Buildings
Slm
"From 30x30"
SMALL

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4x' to 12x40

OHIO.VALlEY
ROOfiNG
And Home Maintenance
•Roofing of all types
•Siding
•Remodeling
•Free estimates
•20 Yrs. experience

does not offer or attemptto

offer anY other thing for
sale may place an ad In this
column. There will be no

chargetotheadvertlser.
4 cats. One male, black and
white. Three females, one
yellow, two calicos. Call

388·8510.
3 young cats, good
mousers. Call 245·580.4 .

.I

a-PIItln~ftl &amp; Htlt,ftt

u-••cnll"'t
M-Etectrkal •

...,l..,.•tton

l

IS-Otflll'll H••nn,

I

III-UIIJI10bttry

I
I

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

I

.. ········

•re

a•

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

(

I

J

I

l
_..I

388·9303.
12

Situations Wantft

HARPIER Adult C•re Cen·
fer-providing the personal
care your elderly need in a
home like atmosphere.
vacancies now •~alllble.

call 304-675·1293.

. .-.....

...

·-

'

T' . . .

l-c1~-H
=
em
=•~•~1 •
~5~a~le~­
IY OWNIER.: i bdr., opllt·
tevel, living room&amp;. dining
room combination, eat-In
kitchen, Jg. family rm ., 2
112 baths, located In Tara
~states, Club house and

pool privileges, $75,000
firm . Ky...- Creek School
District. Shown by appt.

only call 446·9403.

For sale by owner. 50 acres
and 3 bdr. home, small
cash down, assume low In·
terest m«toage. Call 256-

firepl&amp;ee, f•rnlly room with
wood burner, kltcnen &amp;
dinlllg room , city Khools,
446·2003 before 1:00. ,

· 2 or 3 bdr. home, fully car·
pe~. large yard and gar·
den, 3 mi. from town. Call
.446-0648 after.5.

2079.

LAND

CONTRACT ·2

bedroom. full basement,
workshop wlttl att1ched
lhed, ~ximately · 'h
acre. "-1t •xctllent con·
down
Clition.
....S 11 perctnt .., unpa id
balance. $275 a month . 1n
Racine area . 614·949·2249 ..

m.o.o-suoo

'

4 month old Flame P.oint

Siamese kitten. litter box

trained. 992-5512.
Lef

George

part German
992·5864.

Miller

check your present electrical system.
Residential
&amp; CDmmercial

Gu &amp; WoMr Lines

5 PUPPIES, mother-full

blood&amp;d Pit Bull, 304-675·
4118 .

JIM w~s
Ph. 742-2153

Call742-jt9S
2-8-tlc

Shephard.

. 1Q-12·1

6

Lost and Found

LOST

Reward

for

in-

-=========~l;::::;;;;:::;;:;:==t===~;;:===;l
formation
leading
to
I'!
recovery of Brady
a black
.WANTm TO BUY
J&amp;R
115 lb. Great Dane with un·
cropped ears. Last seen In
.
D&amp;-D
111£'1 NNG SHOP
SCRAP
Centenary area . Call 446·
1111i1PM,I . .
'·RI!PIIIIR .WORK
•Gas &amp; Electric
•Cutting
•Brazing
•20 Yrs. Exp.
ReesonabjltRates
• .. Soutlf'Trilrd

&lt;.

t

~~~~- ll -6-1

e ov· Scrap
om r
Iron
&amp; Metal)
Now picking up iu'nk
auto bodies. Top prices
paid tor auto bodies,
scrap Iron and metals.
1 mile west of Fair·
( p·

grounds on Old Rt. 33.
Mon.·Frl.l: 30to4; 00

~~~~~-~tl

TRASH SERVICE.

Bok 65, Portland, Oh.
Ph. 143-4912
·
u.oo Monthly
Serving the following ·
townahlpo: Lebo non,
Sutton. Lellrt, Olive,
Orango, 5allsbury, .....
ford. Chester, Salem,
Scipio,
Rutlend,

~~!~::.nvllle and Mid-

10·12-tfc

10-12-1

.coMPLETE
RADIATOII
SERVICE
From tho Smalleot

WILSON
BUILDERS

7417 or .4&lt;16·5132.

LOST between· Bulaville
Rd. and Bunce Rd. Cow,
approx. 1,000 lbs. Slack 8t
grey. Call after 5 PM, 446·

1092 .

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
~~s.;,~~~~:~:

AuthorlledJollnra.tr•.
HouanG, 1 " 111 Hot

"'ow.

'Ferm~~~~•nt

FARM EQUIPMENT
P.UTS&amp; SERVICE

USEOEQUli!ME~T

1-No.-o,...,'"'
Trlcfetw/ Cia

MOD·•10 Dl•MlJ .D. ,,.,,.,

MOD-123 1 Row New Idea corn

"''w

Hea.ter
~·- to Jt 11M,
llrttlt ladlator. ,
'
Rldlator Specialist
NATHANBIGGS
35 vrs. E1perlence

·Cor.e

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS JNC.

AND

PAINTERS
ALSO
"Interior Remodeling"

FREE ESTIMATES
Phone 992·2771
or992·7093

Pomeroy, Oh.

Ph. 992-2114

HOUSE-Meadowbrook Ad·

Have room &amp; board tor
elde,-ly . Reasonable rates.
992·6022.

3476.
NEED MONEY? I

furniture . New, used or anpaneling,
t ique. Also buying .glass, Carpentry,
c:hin3 , gold, silver, coins, ceiling til e and floor tile.
watches, chains, etc. Mar· 992·2759.
tin's Gener al Store, Middleport, Ohio. 992·6370.
House cleaning ., 1 day a
week on regular basis. Call
Sharon at949-2160.
Raw furs, hides,

metals ;

bait

radiators, oiinso•no.
r oot,
brokering.
ad Salvage
Eleventh
Also Flea "':'"~~~

Open

Fr iday 1-5 pm .

Will. do baby sitting in my
home anytime. rn Mid·
dleport area . 992-6349.

11 ~:~n~ SANOY AND BEAVER In·
13

LOCUST posts, 8 ft.

4" small tip·chip poles.

collar. Phone 882-3389 after

675·6325 after 6 p.m.

5 p.m .

- - - · -- -

Phone ~ · 1694 .
--------------All TO MOBILE
IN .
5 URANCE
been can·

phone30H75-so72.
LDST·Male, black &amp; while
cat, vicinity Gallipolis
Ferry. Answers to name·
Abraham. ReWard . Phone

304-675·6264.
1

Help Wi!nted

celled?
Lo s t
your
operator' s license? Phone
992·2143

Why se"le for less. Sell the
best. Sell Avon . For more
Information call 446-3358 or
742· ~354.

Yard Sale

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

--- -Schools
- -lqstructien
- - -·-

15
Full/part time sales. $30
commission &amp; multilevel
bonus.
Food
product
everyone uses . Call
Marianne «6·1988.

PIANO &amp; music reading
classes. 7 years teaching
experience 1 304 -675· 2.WO.

Yard Sale at 29 Henkle

10·21·1 mo.

Ave., Gallipolis. Friday
women

ie'ans.

Clothes.

misc.9 AM lo 5 PM. Men &amp;
from
Gigantic Yard Sale. Nov.
12-13-1.4, 9 to ? 38 Smithers
Ave.. Gallipolis. Antique
turn., TV, tools, dishes,
clothes.

18
Fuller Brush Represen·
tatlve In your area. Call

304·273-4559 or write Rt. 1,
Box

2-43,

Ph. 992·2772

Wanted to Do

Baby sitting , near
FoocUand, any age, meals,
snacks, toys, sate home,
references. Call .._...·71-46,

Ravenswood,

W.Va. 26164 .

SJSweeklv.

Older lady to live in with
light housework. Call Mvr·
tie Harrison at 992·3704.

Bookkeeper· or• secretary
position full or p•rt time. 12
yrs. experience, IOOd loc•l
references. Call 446·0113 or
416·0871, Karen .

Exp&amp;rlenced man to da
TownhOUse Rummage Sale body wcrk and painting.
Thu,.,., Fri., ·&amp; Sat. 12, 13, &amp; Apply In person at Hysell
14. 9 to ? Clothes ell sizes, Used Cars, Rutland, Ohio.
small washer, tools, misc. 2 Only serious workers need
112 miles on little Bull Skin

Rd. off 218.

Insurance

sura nce Co. has offered
services for fire Insurance
coverage in Gallla County
for
ar most a c~ntury .
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet individual needs. Contact
Neil In's. Agency, agent.

LOST·West Columbia area-

; ~~==~~;;~~~r-==~~~~~==f~=~;~;~~=~~ ·Gallipolis
LOS T
· -.-B
- e_
a _g_l_e - Reward,
- d-o-g,
Ferry.
•

576·2711.

GolcJ. s·ilver, sterl
jewelry, ·
i
currency.
ber s·hop, M iddleport.

daily .

black·, white &amp; brown
Beegle, last seen wearing

Butcher's Shoppe Custom
butchering &amp; processing;

Call
Dh.

apply .

~· 2851 ,

Gallipolis,

Slyllotl; Mark Mara
and Cindy C!flllllerlsooo.
New Hours:

VInyl&amp;
AlumiRum Siding

..

Mon. 111 ...7:10

T-.n•••••

w..... ,.......

~

"'==-

nuro.II:IH:•
Prl. tt••s••

.................
PHON I ftHOJI
Union Ave.

=!n:::lllll

Ph. 112·7201

Ba•ment Sel• 333 3rd.
Ave. Back entranc:e. Fri. lo
Sat. 8·5. Chllctnn &amp; edUIII
clothing, small epplltlncet,
lol1of mloc.

1542.

SANDHILL

Road ,

Pl .

Pleasant, 3 bedrooms, l't2
baths, double garage .
Owner will finance. I m·
mediate occupancy . 304-

675·5117 .

THE Roush home at 2515

Mt. Ver~n is for sale call ·
the son at 614·927-5413.
3 bedroom older home, approx. 4 acres, 10 miles from
town . Phone675-6597 ._

OWNER financing · New
counstruction, orte acre ·
long. J bedrooms, 2 full :
baths, living room with
lireJ)Iace .
Attached
garage, payments like
rent. Nice low interest
.property. Phone 30~ · 675 ·

3030 or 675·34J1.

32

. Mobile Homes

for Sale
-;---:--"''-""=---

TFiti·STATE
MOBILE ·
HOMES. Gallipolis. Year
end sale, price reduced,
used mobile homes. CALL

.4&lt;16·7572.

CLEAN USED MOBILE '·
KESSEL 'S ,
HOMES
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES. 4 MI. :
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE ol-06·3168.
12x65 mobile home, 2 lots In
C_all ,

4

.:::~~ . Subdivision.

12x50

Kentuckian,

2.: 1:

bedroom, 1 bath, gOod con· ...

dition, 11ew carpet,

13,795. Call UHS47 .

only

1971 KirkWOOd 12x65 two
bedroom,
air cond . ,
1wning, on rented lot. Ph .

675·573'1 after 5:00.

Will do babysltlln~ in m~
home. Garfield arta. Call *livered a. lnstalted. Fran·
ch City Mobile Home, Inc.
dedicated professional who 446-4113 . .
C•ll-93o40.
Is quallfl... by education
,.
and experitmce, and who TV service calls. C•ll 992·
shares our commlttment to 2034. Also used color TV for
high standards of patient sale'.

currentlY seeking a director of nursing. Are you the

HAIR REME,DIES

dition. 3 bedroom, family
room with fireplace, cen·
tral air. basement. 304-675-

MO!IILE HOME ADD·A·
ROOM. Complole oelectlon
of sizes •nd floor plans

RN , Local ,100 bed ICF Is

!JIL·BLOWN
· INSli..ATION

..

Or rent,J ~ bedroom fur·
nished home on Bud Chat·.
trn Road on big level lot.

·

1 puppies. Part shephard &amp;

. DRIVEWAY
UMESTONE
GRAVB.
'
·ettou.Caal

';t""tn-1772

n.

3 bedroom house, 2 acres, 2
baths, family rOom . Full
bas@ment, garage. 949·

.4&lt;16-4336.

Call-4&lt;16-4933.

' ~========::j;::::::;::;~~~;======~~tc~f.::::::::~~~

·~~'f::::

s.rvtces
2l
PTtfi5Sionil
---=~=~Plano tuning and repair,
Love your n&amp;ighbor tune
your ~ilno. Bill Ward,
w.-rds Keyboarct ..., 4
Gallipolis;

3 bdr., 2 bath, LR With

5 puppies for good homes.

SERVICES
11-H.,.el....,_ttiMtnts

.

9363.

the eligibil ity list at 9922156 or 992·2157.

Terrie~ house dog, perferablY Carin or Yorkshire.
Good with children, will
consider a poodle. Call 614-

'

Company FHA-VA Finan·.
Ci"'l Loan Rep. Cookie
Krautter (JOA)67H473.

!and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a sentinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
1

· Julik cars with or without
motors, and batteries. Cali

1

........... TM Putt~.... Wtll Mt 1te ,...,_ ..... f• . . . tiiML...-

r

ALL STEEL

ESTIMATES
PH. 992-.011
992 _7656
8-20-tfc

PH. 992-5663
· 11

R•Biue lnd R~Finish

l&amp;wtr~t~4-.b .......j~; · ~··
IP,II
....... ~ ........ YIN .....
ICWJJN t'fllly wlftr.
Mfll .,..., U . . . dla'll fir ... CIIWJIIII I • HIIMIMr lA ca,. If

~

pliances,
custom
·bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbin, electric, and
heating.
.
. FREE

•AND CUSTo'MiiA,;ifi,

u, .. u ...,. ... ... ...,: ........... ... ' ... ..... .... ' " ' . ......

__
,.............

·~"'

. GUNSMilHING

Ratts
~Iter Information 1
~::::= ::: :;::_~
u ... .

,.,.,

C. R. MASH
. CONSTRUCTION
Custom kitchens and ap·

...
Middleport, Ohio

~•·w
.JCa

~M.M . It!Nlt

Pom•rov.~.457fJ

Phone 742·31 7 I

ellENTALS

Acutur~s

Mondlyt:lll on laturc:lav ·
T...._y lltnt ''kiiY I !R t".M.

Mall Thll COUIIOft With R1mlttanc1 ,
Thl Dally SlfiHnll
111 COUrt St.

'

r-.----::-:=-::::----,

75-IMIS &amp; Moton
h-Aute hrfl &amp;

Went-Ad Advertlolng
DHdlln••

3-4.-----35. _ _ _ __

~

Phone 742·3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

:.,

n-Au,.RtNir
11-CaM,.fttiEqul...,ent

.

.

31.
32.
33.

'' Velma Nlcinsky, Assoc.

,.._Meforcy(tts

J,_ ......,.

30. _ _ _ __

acres . SHOWN BY AP·
PDINTMENT ONLY.

1J- VIII&amp;4W.D.

36l.. R.. I Ellt .. Wanttd

ng

w/flreptace,

· breakfast room and
· bullt''In liltchen. Full
' baoem~nt, 3 car sora~
. with ollie storage.

12-tr~te:kslorSatt

u-~fi&amp;Ac,....

29. _ _ _ __

' wlflreploce,

, room

71 -Autot for Silo

M-IUINMitlul..lnts

21. _ _ _ __

: Beau,fiful brick
story home with
~ magnificent view of
' Ohio River ..
: bedrooms, 2'h oa•·~~~o.!::
' mal living

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

eTRANSPORTATION

U-MetM.. HIMtl'

j

, RIVERVIEW EXECU·
•T•IIE ESTATE

$29,000.
. REALTOR

"'-.- Hay&amp; Grain
· ·U-SHCI &amp; Fertllbtr

eREALESTATE

23. - - - ' - - , - - - 24.
25.
26.
27. _ _ _ _ __

:$65,000.00.

,S IIe

U-Profestkwlel

21
-_
-_
-_
--_
22.. __

mlng . two story
~ tric home. Large
1 room,
formal
j room; kitchen
' breakfast nook.
~ bedrqoms, 2 f~ll 'baths,
q md walk up attic. Full
basement with wood
, burner. Double garage.
Close to grade schOol .

pretty fireplace, plus 3

n-Wenttcl to Buv
U-LivtstOCII

CltJportvnity
n - MIIftey,. LOAn

.

.

Meney to LNn

!GET VALUABLE;'raining
las 1!1 young busl ness person

1

-With a beautiful stairway at the end and a

, 1 ~F•'m e_,,,mer~t

•

dental gold . Class rings,
wedding rings, silver coins
or
anything stamped
sterling. Clarks Jewelry
Store. Gallipolis 446·2691 or
992-20s.t 1n Pomeroy 1

POMEROY, IDEAL
' LOCATION - 'Char·

HUGE LIVING ROOM

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

.. .

Giveaway
ANY PERSON who has
anythlngtogiveawayand

• your private show! no.. ·

buy. NOW$31,000.

U-ll•lldlnt Sup,iles
5t-Pett tor Salt
n-Muskel tmtrvmtft1
• M--Frults &amp; V$tllltl
59-For S.lo or Tr•dt ,

eFINANCIAL

.· .

' cent wallpaper. Near
i Baum Addition. Call for

carpet thro·ughout, new
wiring, new furnace.
and new gas line makes
this 2 story 4 bedroom
home on a good str&amp;et in
Middleport an excellent

51-HoUS.I'IoW Ooocl1
n-ca, TV, Radio IE•lpment
S3-Anftquu
1
14- Mitc . MtrcM""M

It-Radio. TV,
&amp; CIR.,.Ir
lt-Wantecl To De

_.;__.,..:_ _

Some furniture.

~-FerLuse

11-Help W8nttd
, n-llttMttlft wa•tee ·
1)-.:.lnsurence
l,._luslnen Trainlnt
11-Schoelt lnttnldiorl

20.~--~-

~e~utlf~ ~ ~~r!sEac~ent

\ovtiY .two story horne.
: with swimming pool.
I Four bedrooms, 2'12
: baths With delux.e kit·
, chen and breakfast
, room, . formal living
: w/firelace, formal
~oom
1 dining, ·family

eMERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

______

1

with
S rooms,
2
bedrooms, and nice ·
back porch. Very low

' ..-APartments lor JtEnt
4~Furnlslttct Room 1
46-~utorR ...t
41-W•ntee ta Rent
41-ECftllpmtflt for Rtftt

&amp;Awctt•

..

!S7S,ooo.oo.
, couNTRY· ExEcun-

JorR'"'

t-wa nNe! tt auv

17. ~----18.
19, _ _ _ _ __

' W/blrch custom made

1

'

Columbus First MortQaot ·

stamped 10K, 14K, 18K and

21f.l d;~ji~~t--:-~;:----;;--------c;----...--......---, 4
e··.

, cabinets, familY room,
~ utili tv room, larg~ lot on
Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy.

41-Mtltllt Homtt

Sill

B usrn· ess servlces

spacioUs

home . L.ivlng
• .
'bedroom
~ w/fireplace,
1
, room.- equlpped

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

._..Lost IfNI FDIMNI

( l Anriounceme~t
( l For Rent

LISTI\'!G

Or Writ• Dally Sentinel Cl~ssified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oh. 4p69

t-Div. .wtv
t-H...,.l..

( )Wanted
( )ForSale

5. HobsteHer Jr.

\lovely,

TWO BIG LOTS -And
a one floor plan home

PHONE 992-2156

r-VMIIIt

WEMBLEY, England (AP) -

''NEW

Metro with 2 bedrooms,
detached one car
garage, 11.1 acre nice lay·
lng lot, and concrete
patio. $12,000.

~AftMUncetntl'lb

3.()

.

Broker

MOBILE HOME AND
LOT-IN RUTLAND- ·
A 12&gt;&lt;5-4 New Moon ·

path!

OFFICE 742-1003'

~ George

large kitchen, living
room. and bath. Over 1h

-

'

.

WANT AD INFORMATION

•-c•rtl ol Tfl•nlu
. l-Ilt Mtmttlfm

as Chris Evert IJoyd whipped
Carmen Perea 6-2, 6.() and Andrea
Jaeger beat Victoria Baldvinos 6-G,
6-2. The other U.S. point came with a
doubles trlwnph.
The Soviet Union knOCked out
Czechoslovakia Z.l as Olga Zaltaev
and SveUana Cherneva downed
Hana MandHkova and Renata
Tomanova 11-4, 6-3 in. the deciding
doubles match.
·
In other matches, West Gennany
whipped Bra~ll; Australia beat
China; Britain downed France;
R&lt;1DI8nia beat Israel and The
Netherlanda defealed China-Taipei
by 3.() scores.
.

4

bedrooms. familY room,

Housinq
Hr.•,ulqu;IT rer•;

•ANNOUNCEMENTS

Sports briefs ...
Tennis

ST0R:Y

With

trees and a pli!ice for a
garden. $20,500.

Phone
H 614 l-992-3325
NEW LISTING - 6

IT'S IN THE AIR - Everyone has a swipe at the

-

acre ol yard with fruit

614-992-2181
For Fa·rm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating 011.

· e

lila

HO.ME

22

~~~~~g~~~~,~~=~~~~;§~

approx. 2 acres with -4

bedrooms,

1

Racine Vol. Fire Dept.
sponsors a shotgun &amp; riflt
match every Sat. night at I
Public Sate
11
HetpWantM
6:30p.m . at their bUilding
&amp;Auction
The o.o. Mcintyre Park
at Bashan. Factory choke Big Christmas. Auction. District Is now acCepting
12 guage shotgun &amp; open Sat., 7 PM at Pageville, Oh . applications for part-ti me
sight 22 rifles.
The (Greek} will be there recreation leac1ers. InWith lots of Christmas toys structon, and .program
App.les, Honey and Sweet and gifts. SDmethlng for director positions. The
Cider. ·G rimes, Romes, everyone.
Park District is Interested
Gal., and Red Delicious,
in offering afterschool
Staymen Winesap. SS.25 9
programs for children as
wanted
to
Buy
per bushel and up. Cheaper
well as evening classes and
in volume. Fitzpatrick Or- WANT TO BUY Old fur· programs for adults. If '(OU
chard, SR689. PhOne 611· niture and Antiques of all have any special sk.llls Or
669·3785.
kinds. call Kenneth Swain, talents. 'fOU would like to
256· 1967 in the evenings.
share or are Interested In a
possible p!rt·tlme position
The IZaak Walton Club will
in recreation. stop in tha
have their deer slug CASH PAlO for clean,
shooting match at the model used
sm11n I Park District Off ice to pick
up an application or
lzaak Walton Farm 3 V2 Buick-Pontiac.
«tt·.tti12, ext. 76 to' llave an
miles south of Chester and Ohio.· Call-4&lt;16·2282.
application sent to you.
Shade River Rd.
The
match will start at 1 p.m .
Sunday Nov. 8 and will be Dolls, old qui
The Gallipoli s· Recreation
.continue~ each Sunday at
Department is currently
rugs,
stertin.
g
the same time until deer glass, lamps, and
,.15,. 1 taking applications for,
9
season.
It will be bench
basketball referees and
304·52S·5.545.
and off hand shooting. Call
.scorekeepers for the R ink.y
Ron,
12
Noon
111111
p.m.
Prizes will be turkey, ham.
~O i nk Basketball Program.
and bacon.
!Apply bu Nov. 25 atthe City
BUYING GOLD 3. SILVE!t 1Bulldlng, 518 Second Ave.,
paying cash for anything !Gallipolis.

PDSITIVIL Y no hunting on

trespassing

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

Jackson. GOOd cosh flow .
Call216-7019.
'

owned traners avai Iable In

6747. Dally after 1 p.m.

Annou~cements

or

Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Every sun. starting

supplies. Gene. Hines,
Amesville, Ohio. '1&lt;4·448·

,3 ---,;=====--'
No hunting

Hollow61H98-3290.

TRAPS and TRAPPING

ofler0d. 67S·IJ02.

3 acres, will divide, 1

· appt'Oil,

S15U,OOO wllh 50,000 down, :
owner wJ II carry. Also pai"k .

at 1 p.m. Factory ehoke
guns only.

the old H. C. Brown Farm
opposite Racine locks
Letart, wv. Signed Bill Me·
Daniel.

In Mason County

luslness

Opportunity
Trailer Pork, 15 spaces
plus 3 bdr., brick hOme on ·

Stolitn Property. Antique
kitchen safe . Antique
,
dining room cabinet. Two
1 rocking chairs. Other
items. Anyone knowing or
seeing this furniture being
hauled In the vicinity of
Flatrock. WV on October 10
or later, a liberal reward Is

992·2156

Announcements

21

mission. Kenneth (Butch)
Watson.
'

TO PLACE AN AD CALL
1n Meigs county ·
In Gallia c;ounty

bltSS each one.
Elmo. Earl, Erma, and

McCausland

No Hunting or Trespassing
on Kenneth Watson farm,
Without
written
per·

937- BuHalo

kindness during the "lllnes
and death of our brother
Julien l!lolfman. May God

Bright

Farms.

Area Code 304
675-Pt. Pleasant
4st--Leon .
576-Apple Grove
773-MIISon
,
882- New Haven
Its-Letart

food, cards, and all .acts of

'

Farm operat&amp;d by Woolhan

Mason Co., w. Va.

Squads. blood donors, end
to all who helped In any
way. For the many flowers,

~

on

tot-Racine
742-Rutland

and

tors, Ewing Funeral Home,
Rev. Miller, Health care
center,
emergency

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

NO hunting &amp; lr-5511111

247- Letart Fatls

. 64J-Anbla DIS!.

neighbors. To VeteranJ
Memorial Hospital, Doc· .

WAIT AD\U.Y

Pomeroy

256-Guyan Dlst.

We wllh to express our appreciation to all our
relatives, . friends

--VIntan
245-Rio Grande

work on form with house
Inc: lulled, IIOOd worker with
references. Call 381·1179.

81lop1 tlae

'"

992-Micldloport

F1m11r man *ants steady

IVDYBODY

Meigs Co. Area Code

446-Gallipolis
367- Chlsllirt

Announcomonll

3

Claasified Pagu cover the
follmeing telephone exchanges .••

SWEEPER • end sewing
m)lchlne yepelr, parts, and
supplies. · Pick up and .
delivery,~ OavJs vacuum
Cleaner, one half. mile up
. Georv&lt;!!/. Creek Rd. Call
446·0294,.

-~

. . ....

\

--·- ---

cere? Your ulary will
cammensuratw with your
experience and our Dllwf.lt

WILL do HollcHIY llaklnt,
candy

package 11 liberal. Si:enlc
Hilla Nursing C.nter, lox
262,11-, Ohlo&gt;1561.j, At·
tn : Kim Nye, Ad·

malclr\g,

cake

decorattftll. sarah ~•""""­ - -·- -::--::--tlreotkally ri&lt;IU&lt;:&amp;d : ::
call 304·67 5· 5117 fef
Uldrm. • .-le-onon ,·
estimate.
aero, NW drilled -11.

..,.1&lt;.

Bid Gara;. Sale Fr1..., •
Saturday. Take 141 te t7S, mlnlstrator. We are an
on Palrlot·C... mut Rd. Equal Opportunity Em·
Christmas gilts, toolo, ptoyer.
bikes.
LPN or RN lor private duly
nunlnil for mal• patient at
Pinecrest Caro Center. C•ll
30H7H941.

•.0110.--..

11-1 111111.
I

..

'.
•'

�Ohio

sentinel
Mobile Homes
tor Silt

32

·• 3, mobile homes ux70,
10x50. 12x60. Jackson. Call
286·7019.
.
3 mobile homes on one lot.

.w· Custer Sl.. Middleport.
614-992-3318 or 6].1·992·2685
after~

p.m .

1 bedroom furnished end

set up. Immediate · oc·
cupancv . $5,250. In Country

Mobile Home Park. 992·
7419.

1971 Oarian 12 x 65, 3

bedrooms .

1972

Crown

Haven, 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
ex'p andQ, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utopia 12 x ·6S, 2 bedrooms.

1972 Invade r 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 1-t
x 60, 2 bedrooms. S 1/ • S
Sates, Inc. 2nd and VIand

Sts. Pl . Pleasant,
Phone 675·4424.

WV . 1

MOBILE home !cealed in
Camp Conley, eKfri!! nice

and clean, phone 304-8953967.

USE D MOBILE
576·2711 .

HOME .

1973 3 bedroom 14 x 70. underpinned . 675·4064.
1977 Victorian 14 x 70" two

bedroom. family room, all
electric. Call 675·31il87 or

675·3862.
1973 Grandeville 14 x 70, 3

bedroom

mobile

home,

price.d for quick sale. 304·
882 ·3433.
35

Lots &amp; Acreage

Would you like to own a
· home of your own. we
: didn't have SlO,OOO tor a
• down payment nor 55,000
· nor eveoS1 ,000. Do what we
: did Call'513·592·9175 .
· BY owner, 3 apartment
house on approx. 1 acre.
Live in one, r:ent others to
• make your payment. Can
. be converted sihgle home.
· City water, will consider
· land contrac t. 675·1883 9-5
p.m .

41

HouseiiOid Goods
51
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
V:a ctouble hoUse. 2 bedroom Sofa, chair, rocker, ot·
furnished.
Deposit toman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa,
requrled. Adults preferred. chair and loveseat, $275.
Sofas al')d chairs prlf;ed
NO pets. Call614·992·2749.
$215. to $795. Tabies,
TWO bedroom, furolshed
one and two bedroom apar·
and up to $109. Hide-a·
cottage at 2103 Jefferson tments
~~;;;;~,r:'~ beds.U40 .. queen size, $380.
Ave. Deposit required. 304· no pets,· ~~~·~:~~r~, ;~.
Recliners, S175. to S295.,
61
675-4100, day .
614·992·2878
Lamps from $18. to $65. 5
pc. dlfettes from S79., to
SJ85. 7 pc ., S189. and up.
2 HOUSES, 4 rOQms each, On~ bdr. turn . apt. in Mid· WOod table with 4 chairs.
St. Rt. 87, 30H95:J879.
dleport. 992·7177.
$219 up to S.C95. Desk S110.
Hutches, $300. and $375 ..
42
Mobile Homes
Apartments. 675·5548.
"ecfroomor pine finish .
for Rent
o1
suites · Bassett
$675 ., Bassett Cherry,
. 2 bdr. mobile home, total
. Bunk ~ complete
electric, 2 112 miles past
mattresses, $-?SO. and
Holzers on 160, 5175. Call
$350. Captain's beds,
446·3533.
. . complete. Baby beds,
Mattresses or box
2 bdr . and 3 bdr. mobile
"ot&gt;la•·l springs, full or twin, SSB.,
homes. Call446·0l75.
,..,
firm , S68. and S78. Queen
set.s, $195 . .5 dr. chests, S-49.
4 dr. chests, S.C2. Sed
2 bdr. mobile home on .
frames, S20.and .S25 .• 10 gun
Roush Lane, Cheshire, new
------~-- 1· Gun cabinets, $350., dinet·
lot. Call 304-773·5862.
te chairs $20. and $25. Gas
Efficiency rooms.
or electric ranges, $295. Orweek
on
Main
2- bdr. trailer will be
available Nov . 7. Adults Mason. WV .773·5651 .
super firm,
th()jledic
S25 &amp; $95,
$35,
baby matresses,
only, no pets, 322 Third
bed tramesS20, $25, &amp; $30.
Ave. Call 446·3748 or 256· Twin single,
1" ,.~~:'i:i:l used.
Ranges,
1903.
and yard. Pt . P 1
refrigerators, and TV's,
Deposit and references. 1· 3 miles out Bulaville Rd.
2 bedroom, unfurn. mobile 614·263-8322 .o r Ht4•263· open 9am to 7pm. Mon.
thru Fri ., 9am to5pm, Sat.
home on R:t. 35. Ref. &amp; dep. 2669.
446·0322
required. Caii.U.S·-4229.
IN Middleport. 2 bedroom,
Mobile home. 2 bdr. fur· furnished apartment, 1
nished, in Cheshire. Ref . &amp; small child, 1·304·M2-2566.
dep. required . Call 446·
4229.
IN Middleport. 2 room ef- 54"--"
M!!Is,c:.:..,M,e;cr,;ch,a,n,d,ic,e' flclency apartment, 1·304· 1 Flrewood·split, delivered
and stacked. Mixed wood
2 bedroom unfurn. mObile a82-2566.
home on Georges Creek
S6S per cord or $35 per half
Rd. Ref . &amp; dep. required.
bedroom unfurnished cord. Hardwood $15 per
Call 446·4229.
apartment, adults only, cord or $40 per half cord .
located 'Gallipolis Ferry. Call for .q uotes on large
quanities·. Phone 2-45-5478.
2 bedro~m mobile ' home 615· 1371 or 675·3812.
down Rt. 7, $125 per mo.,
adults only . Call256· 1157.
FURNISHED apartment, New woodburning fur 304-895·4350.
nance s.cso, Davis 700 trench!r &amp; hoe $5,500, -40 ft.
3 bdr., 2 baths, approx. 4
112 miles from Gallipolis, TWO apartments in Clif· Fruehauf box trailer $3,500,
26 ft. goose·neck flat bed
gOOd neighborhOOd, large ton. 304-675·1044.
trailer $2,500. Phone 614lot, $175 mo., dep required.
256,1216.
Call446·2676 after 6PM.
45
Furnished Rooms

2 bedroom furnished. Off
R:t. 7, Pomeroy. 5190 plus
utilities, lawn care. 5150
deposit. Available Nov . 11.
1981. 614·985·3949.

Houses for Rent

4 bdr. 2 112 bath bl le ve l
with pool off Rt. 35. Call
Wise marf Real Estate
· Agency . 446·3643.
FOR LEASE OR RENT·
Modern 3 bdr . ranch near
town . SJOO per month,
de posi t &amp;
referen ces
required . Call STROUT
REALTY 446·0008 .
we will b! having several
homes for rent, lease or
lease with option to buy
within the next few weeks.
All aver 5200 per mo. &amp;
required referen ces &amp;
deposits. For more in·
formation call Strout
Realty 446-000a .
3 bdr. house, 2 baths, fully
carpeted, $300 plus deposit,
35 Chillicothe Rd ., no pets.
Caii446·374B or 256 1903.
For sa le or rent. Lovely 3
bdr . house in country set·
ting.
Convenient to
Gallipolis or Rio Grande .
21 6·734-3734, e ve nings.
Unfurnished house for rent,
1 bdr ., S160 mo., dep .
required,~ no utilities paid,
no pets, 57 Olive St. Phone
446·7886.
7 rm . house in town.
Inquire at 918 2nd. Ave.,
Gall ipolis. No phone call s .
House for re nt. Ca ll -4463945.

tor Rent

~

J bdr . mobile home, 5 miles
from Holzer. Ref. &amp; dep.
required, 1 small child accepted, no pets. Call 446·
2995 .

TWO bedroom mob ile
home in Mason. adults
only, no pets. 3o.t·675· 1452.
TWO bedroom, furnished,
montnly plus utilities,
water paid, Glenwood, 304·
576·2441 or 576-9073 .
$1.~0 .

ONE bedroom,' adults only,
furnished , you pay. uti lilies,
30H75·2535.

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Park Central HoteL
Room &amp; board for gentleman. For light work on
farm . Reasonable . 742 ·
2266.
46
Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, · North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992·7479.
.
MOBILE home space in Pt.
Pleasant, large lot, garc:ten
spOt, free water &amp; 'sewage.
304-675· 1699.
MOBILE home spaces, Jet.
H2 at o.ld Y. 304-675·3248.

OFFICE space or small
business room, Private
TWO bedroom trailer, 304- bath. 1508 Jefferson, Phone
675·4088.
• 304·675·1435.
2 bedroom mobile home,
furnished or unfurnished,
located Camp Con.ley . 675·
1371 or 675·3812 .
51
TWO bedroom tra iler,
$100 .00 a !Tionth plus
deposit &amp; utilities, 304-576·
2328 or 576·2606 .

·- ===~~=
Apartmemt

Household Goods)

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES · washers,
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs Ap ·
pliances, 191a Eastern
Ave., 446·7398.

tor Rent
Furnished apts. nice, 1 USED REFRIGERATOR:
bdr., adults, steam heat, electric range, as is,· dinet·
$220 utilities pd. Call 446- te set, .t chairs .. Corbin and
Snyder Furniture, 955
4416 after 7PM. ·
Second, Gallipolis. Call «62 bdr. apartment unfurn .,
in Crown Clly , Ohio. Call
256-6520.
Mobile home In city central
air and heat , adults only,
dep. 446·0338 .
2 BEDROOM apartment,
kitchen furnished , HUD
program, utilities paid, if
qualified . 304-675·5104 or
304-675-7364.

3 brd ., 2 bath, tr l· ieve l, gas
heat, ru ra l wate r. Call 4-46· ·
2957.
APARTMENT for Rent.
ca 11446·0390.
For re nt 104 4th Ave . Sma ll
2 bdr., no more than 1 Small furnished house,
adults. Call446·2957 .
adults only . Call 4-46·0338.

'N' CARLYLE lP'

Apartmemt

41
Houses for Rent
2 be-drooM house in Letart
Falls, Ohio. D ining room,
fireplace ,
range arid
refrlgator included . $125
plus deposit. 1·216·5Jn54J.

1171.
Rodger' s Trading Post 92
Olive St ., G~llipolis. Open
9·5, 6 days a week. Fur·
niture, appliances, an·
tlques. Sell, buy, &amp; trad(! .
Magic Chef gas range, cop-pertone in color. $75 or best
offer. Ca 11256·1932.
For sale GE washer 18 lbs.
load, A· 1 shape. mo.
Maytag dryer , good
shape,$70. Call446·8t81 .

Jl ',

1978 Plymouth 1/ololre,
cyl. Call379·2726.

DICK TRACY

Homo
I mprevemetlb

1970 Cadllac coupe
loaded,
needS work. Best-··
8263. '

•

FM radio, good
Sl ,300. Call 367·(1.105
5PM.

Misc. Merchandlce
Lump coal s.ts for deliver.
Firewood $30 T delivered.
Call 379-2617.
·
Locust Posts. 99H102.

~~---P~e~l~s~fo~r~s~o~l•~---

Have 3 male Cocker
Spaniels to breed . 2 blonde,
1 red, good blood line, AKC
registered . 4.46·9372 after
5 :30PM.

1972 Datsun truck, tomatoe 2 Poodle puppies. 6 wks.
or tobacco planter, 3 pt. hit- old, 1 black, 1' sliver. Call
ch, 8 ft . camper top, kallter4, 446·9219.
Bluetick female coon
hound registered. 61,.·949AKC , Registered Chow
2545 after 5 p.m.
Chow puppies. Call .u6·
Discontinued cabinets, toP,
stove. hood , sink. $1200.
Dale's Kitchen Center. 6752318.

10 speed boys bike, 26 inch
girls bike with baby
carriage, gOOd condition.
675-7148 .
.
Oak Firewood. Call 675·
2757 after -4 pm.
Oil stove with thermostat
and blowers, 2 years old.
$100.675-7142.

132~ .

Fish Tank and Pet 'Shop
2413· . Jackson Ave., Pt.
Pleasant. 675-~063. Mon.,
ThurS.,/ Fri. 11 to 6. Tues.,
Wed., I Sat . 11 to 4. Check
our Fish Special.
AKC
Dachshund,
Pomeranian and Poodle
pups, 30H95-J958.
AKC Cocker· Spaniel pups,
parti colors, 615-S126. ·

ONE male Beagle, 30-4·675·
415~.

AM· FM stereo with turntable, a-track , 2 speakers,
Musical
For Sille : 750 and 1000 $140. Kodak instamatic $10. 57
Instruments
gallon PLASTIC septic Bedroom suite, 304·773·.
tanks. Stale and County ap- 5505.
Lowery piano console conproved . Total weight 300
cert, like new, will
lbs., Haul in your pick-up
reasonable .
truck. Ron Evans Backhoe KiNG model9901 B coal &amp; sacrifice,
Busher
400,
alto
wood
burner
with
blower
&amp;
Service, located 3 miles
South of Jackson on St. Rt. shaker grate, used 1 year. Sa&gt;&lt;aphone . Caii446·0S41.
·304-458'1 806.
93. 286·5930.
58
Fruit
&amp; Vegetables
BROWNIE
outfit,
jumper,
Riding lawn mower, ll ·H·
blouse, complete. Size 10, . CORN $2.75 bushel, 304-675·
S, like new. Catl256·6-409.
$15. Phone 304-675o1714.
2786.
Bumper Pool table solid
slate top, cues &amp; pool balls L u M P co a I $45. ton 5~9~~~F
~_,o
::r="sC:a71e=:o=:r::;T;=r:;:
ad
:;:e:=
included . Call -4-46-4347 delivered . FirewOOd 530. ton delivered. JoH7H199.
New 3 bedroom house,
W!ekdays after 5.
family room, 1 3/4 bath, 2
car garage, central heat
Patriot Home Builders will Rabbits, mixed breeds. and air. Good location near
now build a 3 bedroom fully Fry size, 10 weeks old. hospital In su·n klst Sub·
carpeted and finished $3.00. 576·2725.
division. Call446-3617 .
hOme on your lot ~ Only
$24,.500. Phon~ 379-2617 .
Four U inc'h Cragar wheels
to fit Chevrolet. Two 13 in-.o o . . . .
..'
..,...
Model 94, Winchester 30-30 ch mud and snow tires. Ml
r ifle
lever ·action Military Rifle 30,06 $100.
w/carrying case. Like new. Caii89S·3638.
Call 446· 1956 after 5PM.
Used tires . Hanshaw's, 6.1•c__.:.
F.::.•:.:rm=:E,q.,u!tlp:::m:::e"""-'For sale firewood. Split, Lucas Lane Road. 675·7360. early
model Gravely trac·
stacked and delivered . 530
tor with mower for sale,
a large pickup load. Call David Brown tractor, 990 $900. Call-146-1570.
446·8535 or 446· 7993.
diesel, $1900. Sears ' gas
wall furnace, 15,000 BTU .
80 model Gravely tractor, 2
Black rod iron dinette $150. 675·2283.
wheel, 30 in. brush hog ·
chairs with red bottoms ~
mower, electric start, 8
tops, plush, good cond., sao. ~itatlon gas stove, needs HP. Call 2A5·9420 or 2A5·
Call446·3937.
·
new thermostat, 550. Also 5286 before 2PM. ,
Hotpoint electric stove,
needs
new element $20. 675·
Cocker Spaniel pup reg .,
G!iavely parts, used. We
stero system, Luxman 7632.
have junked several old
receiver with 501 Boss
model Gravely tractors
speaker . Call38a·8240. ·
One 6 Inch Sandstone and wlll sell serviceable
Fluestarter . Four tires and parts at 112 price. Outdoor
50x10 mobile horne good for wheels for 67 Cutlass. 675· Equiprhent Sales. Jet. Rts.
7 &amp; 35; G~lllpolls, Oh.Ph.
workshop or storage $500, 1198.
.146·3670. Closed Tues. &amp;
Dresser &amp; mirror $35, kitch!n table $25, 2 sets of box Oak Firewood $35 truck Thurs . unt11Mar.1,1982.
springs &amp; mattress $75, end load . Call675· 1828.
tables $20 ea. Call 386·9091 .
Gravely tractors, several
ONE
commode
&amp; 1981 models still In stock at
Apeco copier, Scottsman lavoratory $30.00. One 6.008 greatly reduced prices.
ice machine, file cabinets, cu. ft . Kenmore freezer ·Outdoor, Equipment Sales,
drafting table, dentist $100. call 304-675·-4001.
Jet. Rts. 7 &amp; 35, Golllpolls.
Ph, 446·3670. Closed Tues.
chair, small .freezers, 4 cu.
ft. office refrigerator. Call NEW boys bicycles·1D &amp; Thurs. until Mar. 1, 1982.
388·9698.
speed, 2·20". Phone 304·675·
NEW idea 2 i-CYN picker
1464.
Used heavy equipments
sheller, narrow raw. New
tires, 26.5·25!2500x251 tubes
Holland grinder &amp; mixer
3D-30 deer #352.
Also straw-olher farm
&amp; llaps. 1 Detrlot diesel, WINCHESTER
rifle, 304-675·3508.
equipment. 304-895·3892.
"1, complete. 614-522·3092 .

-....

- -·---- - -

.. ...
1

Ill

I

&amp;

CAPTAIN EASY

'

!&gt;AYg HERE FOVR

YeAR!I

MEXiCA~

1977 TRANS AM 400 cu . in.
motor. automatic, red with
black Interior, PS, P8, AC,
tilt wheel , a-track stereo,
cra~rs, · smoked
glass,
side pipes, $4,0110. 304-675·
4210.
Trucks for Sale
72
1971 pickup !ruck. First
$500 get• it. 675·1302.

ANNIE

iN DE£P ¥1/lTER •

M-YOUWERE

Tti' CAPTAIN OF
TH' "HIGPIIIIIOIA •
-A Pfi56EH6Eit

6HIP~

AYE. BUT THAT "HiSPANIOlA"
!jUZ A FLAT-IJOTTOME/)
IJOAT IN A AIW6E~EIIT
PfiiU/. CIUEO
16i.lll/l)"! ~

--I UGED TE"

LOCKSMITH
Service . . .
Residential , automotive.
Emergency service. Cawl
882·2079.

FEitltY LITTLE I&lt;.IDG
A~OGG

A POtiO

THJU% FEET ()ffP-

RON'S ' Television Service.
Speclatizlng In Zenith and
Mot!)rola, Quazar, ~nd
house calls. Phone 576·2398

eo 'I'OU TII1"4K THE

or446· 2~.

RULER OF \IIIW.ACHIA
IS HCJniiNG, EH?

THAT IS THE INSULT
OF l!.iSULTS, 'IOU

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

SNAKe I

1

GASOUNEALLEY

'

I K)

Quett:

Jeck

tod~. ~mini.)

(j) ·

WINNIE

I'VE GOr TO
PECI17E WHAT

HM&gt;OUGNEfl
liP ON MOOEL-

1 1M 60iNGTO i~? MAR'INKA
15N'T 'TJIE Qlt.Y ·
/70 WITH
A6ENT IN 'TJIE
MY LIFE,
WORU'.

IN

FAd. )01.1 C'Ot/lP .

MOPI!L F'OR' US

... Hlldllll7 WtWKtE
FASH/ONS... IF
)OIJ't:' LIKE.

I WAS
THINKING
OFW~KING

Willi MYMII?S:'II
!I'll A PRETTY
GOOD
SEAIIISTRESS

Equipment,
530Case
With 24
$1,200.
In
Oh.
For more Information call
collect 1·216·243·0256, ask
lor Paul.

YOU KNOW...

•

BACKHOE and Septic !link
Service . . Larry Sldenslrlcker. 675-5580.

-·-

BARNEY

I ALREADY

CUPS

OF FLOUR

FROM

IF I ASK FOR
ONE MORE ··I
MIGHT REALLY
BE ,ASKIN'
f.OR IT .

LOWEEZV .

THIS

1

,.

WEEK

QIMME ABREAK
e(lJ TAXIloulala
gleeful,

Alex is aghut when Alex'a
altair with ltte new waitreaa at
Mario ' ala complicated by
another
suitor.
(Ctoaad·
·
CaP'tloned; U.S.A.)
10:00 (J)II&lt;IJHILLSTREETBLUES
An elderly man, angered at the
decline of the multi-racial
n•ghborhood and the taunta of
the children, al'loota a Hlapanlc
youth •nd barrlcadea himaeH In
hla home . (60 mlna.)
(l)@m 2t&gt;-20Hugh Downs
anchor a thla weekly magazine
prutlllng noteworthy eventaln
npwa, acience and entertain·
ment . (80 mlna.)
• (() !1DJ JESSICA NOVAK
Jeaalca Novak experiencea a
mounting terror when a he
becomea the object of an
unknown admlre'r'e deranged
affKtiona. (80mlna.)
(I) I, CLAUDIUS
illJ NEWS
10:18 (]) IIOYII•(WE8TERNl 000
11
lltli The Bullet" 1175
10:110 (]) TBB EVI!NING NEWS
10:18 (}) CBN UPOAT! NEWS
10:30 (]) SINO OUTAMERICA
l)l)
ALFRED HITCHCOCK ·
PRESENTS
10:18 (J) c:!INUPDAT!NEW8
11:00 (J). ([) (lJ. (]) !IDJ@.
NEWS
(}) NASHVILLERFD
(I) DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE
11•08 mLliNTH
. !FAMILY
11•21
BNUPDAT!NEWB
11:30
THETONIQHTSHOW
·
' Gueat Wally Lattimer. (89
mine.)
'
ANOTH!RUFE
BENNY HILL IIHQW
(() CU LATE MOYIE
Quincy, M.E.: 'TKO' When a
prllellghter die• attar a
champlonahlp bout, Quincy
launchea an inveatlaatlon Into ·
the doctor In charge. (ReiMat)
The Saint : 'The Scale a Of
Juetlca' Four direct ore of a
growing bualn111 conglorntf·
ate die from epparent heart
attack a anc1 the Saint mu.t
det..-minl whethMthe de1th1
were colnctdence or •wder.

i

MINV5"

I

tNCLEY

• !IJ !IDJ MAGNUM, P.l.
Magnum 1a Intrigued and FUck
and TC are amuaed when
beautiful Jennifer Chapman
rebuff a Magnum' a ovarturea
and makealt clear that aha
much prefere the company~~
ataldHigginatothatofanyothtM
manJ:80 mine.)
(I) !lll SNEAK PREVIEWS
Crltica Oane SIIJ&lt;,aland Roger
Ebert review thtlttaat tllma.
lnclu~lng: 'Chanel,' thelnelde
etory of the famoualuhlon
deelgner; 'Halloween 2,' the
aequeltothahorrorcl ..alc;and
'Prleat of Love,' lh!l atory ofO .H.
Lawrence and hit wile, Friede.
8:08 (I) NBABASKETBALLAIIonta
Hawke vt WethingtOn Bullet a
8•30 (J)e&lt;IJ LEWIS AIID CLARK
Stu praparat to deland ttte
family name after hie eon Ia
beaten up by another kid.
(]) IIOVtE ·(DRAMAI •• "Tho
BIH Lyoon" tOIO
(1)@. BESTOFTM!WEST
Laney'ellla takee a tumble
when aha tall a l'lopalaaaly In
lo11e wltl'l a handaome etranger
only to learn that he Ia an
outlaw .
(I) IIOYIE ·(COIIEDYI•••
"Great Laver"
1e.IO
l)l) OMNI: NEW FRONTIERS
8•58 (I) CBN UPDATE NEWS
1:00 rDe&lt;IJDiFF'rontSTAOK!S
Kimberly gete a aummar job
modeling for a department
at ore and aeema to be on her
way to a career i.n Parle .
{Cioaad·Captloned; U.S.A.)
(I) 700CLUB
(]) @ •
BARNEY IIILLER A
car, etolen 2&amp; yeara ago, le
found in perfect condition.
lGioaed·Captloned; U.S.A.)
• (I) !IDJ KNOTS LANDINO
Karen atandt vigil over Sid, who
Ilea paralyzed In the hoapltal
wUh a fractured apine reaultlng
from a car accident. (Seaton
Premiere; 80 mtne.)
l)l) JOHN CALLAWAY INTER•
VIEWS 'Howard Coaall' tella
Callaway that he thtnkalha
woranlp of a ports in thla c;ountry
Ia acandaloue and tie attacka
aport• writ era who fall to report
the more aordid aide of aporte

8:30 (J)

AIIC CAPTlOIIID NIWB
~ IIOYII•(DilAIIA)•••

) I I

Now arrange the drcled_letters to
form the surpriN: answer. as sug.

gested by the above cartoon .

Prln! answer tiers:
Yester day.s

I

r.

"0 [ I I

(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles: MAIZE SWOON TUSSLE HiCCUP
AnswBf : How much does that fat lool welgh? A "SIMPLE-TON "

BRIDGE
Be on the defensive
lly Oswald Jacoby
oad Alan Sootaa
The "Bridae World" has a
column called " Kanlar for
the Defense." Eddy Kantar
developo hands where there
are defensive prtlblems.
Here Ia one that you should
really enjoy if you caa keep
from looking at the South
and Eut bands.
You open the jack of
hearts ll&amp;inlt Soutli'a three
no-trump. He bid opened a
lr.-1 7 point ao-lnmlp and
been raiaed to game. Part·
ner follows with the three.
Declarer wins and attacks
dlamoads. You hold off
twice while parlller d!Jcards
from the deuce and 10 of
clubs.
Now, what do you lead?
Eddy points out thet a
spade aliift ia automatic.
Declarer must hold aceking-queen of hearll and ·
klllfl of clubs if your partner
bas plated the correct spot
cardi. The kin.&amp; of spaaes
l(ives him 15 HCP: the ace,
l6. So, it is clear that your
partner holds one of the two
lop spades.
So which spade do yO'J
lead? You must lead the
queen, 11 mikes no differ·
ence whether your partner's
spade honor is the ace or

11·11...1
NORTH
+H
.82
tKQJ1073
+QH

~T

EAST
+A&amp;I

~Qi082

•uu

.. JI097
tAU
+AS ·

·~

+109872

SOUTH
+K97 S
.A.KQ

t9U
+Kn
Vulnerable: Eas1-Wes.l
pealer: South
~eot . Nonll Eliot Soo"
!NT

3 NT

Pass

Opening lead:

Pau

•J

king. As long as he has three ·
spailes, that queen lea4

auarantees you three spade .

{ricks and a plus score. Note
that if you lead the deuce of
spades, d~larer can duck
your partner's spade return
and make hia contract.

dlua•~..,t
by THOMAS JOSEPH
38 Satiric

ACROSS

I RusseU-

39 Printing lenn

(financier I
5 Eva Marie

to Hwruning ·
sound

41 British
Conservative

10 Undeniable

11 Off the ship
13 Nothing,

DOWN

1 Belt

Z Come to pass
It Whlrlpooi
3 Dais
membel'3 II Gossip .
%9 Gertrude
15 Balaam's
4 Literary
19 What's left
steed
adverb
2% Frame of
30 Baseball's
18 Baseball's
5 Italian city
Drysdale
mind
Paul or
8
United
23
Aunt
to
Lloyd
17 Club
18 Of St. Peter 7 You (Ger. 1
"Nancy"
31 Neat
20 Tokyo's
8 Refuse
U Actor Coole 36 Daughler
lo receive . 25 Speck
old name
of
21 Medical
9 Foot lever 27 ltlh U.S.
Cadmus
12 Eulogize
president
fluid
37 Exclamatio~
2% Shopping
center
23 American

in France

poet
25 Slaying
place
28 Clen
27 Bosh!
28Gennan
pronoun

%9 "On the job"
strike

32 However,

b-t-+-+-

for short
33 (iolfer's
gadget
34 I.ambkin's

cry
35 More
outlandish
37 Confined

'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
Ia

how

to

work

'

It:

AXYilLBAAXIl
LONGFELLOW

One letter aimply atanda for another. In this aample A ia
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoatrophea, the lenglh 1nd formation of the warda are all
· blots. E.acb doy the code letters are dlllerent.

,

BZI I

HJS

E JY'

JOGY

IJ J A

XJN
QGSRIM,

·~P-"1(II)eABC-~
Alloh-iiJTod~.

3090.

11 :H (I) MOVII-IJUVIi11LI) 0 "'
"lloglo World Ot Topo
!llotlo" 1... .

'

,,

I

...

•

.\

,.

JY

SZWIJQRM,

- · GITGYN

TCN

DJC

SGHYGGM

EJY

MFRYM .

UCTTRYS

KNOWLEDGE

Yeeterd8y'a ~IF YOU HAVE
LET
~
CANDU!:S ON lT.-MARGARET

u

•

••
,

.
'

CW.YP.I'OQUOTES

epeat)

=·

'.

"TflEA6IIIlE

GENES
CARPET
Cleaning. Special rates for
Nov. and Dec. only. Call
now and save. 614·992·6309.

JACKS REFRIGERATIQ.
N; air condition service,
commercial, InduStrial.
Phone 1182·2079.

KLAYB

aaa~bar .

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex·
perlenced mason, 'roofer,
carpenter, electrician,
1979
and
Deluxe CHEVY
10 pickup, Custom,
tilt bed, ~~g~en~ e~~~)~ tr~et,pairs
Phone 304-675·
28,000 miles, 24 mpg, ·ex·
cellent condition. 30.4·675·
6813.
Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
73
vans&amp; 4 W.O.
Pumps Sales and Service .
1979 Jeep CJ7, 258 6 cyl., 4 304-895·3802.
spd . , 28,000 miles,
Renagade package, tilt Stark's tree trimming and
steering and power removal. lnsur&amp;d. Phone
'
steering, AM-FM l·track. 576-1!()1().
Call after 5 PM, 446·1092 or
446·1112.
Experienced carpenter
available for hpme or
1976 Ford window van. red business re!;JlOdellng . or
&amp; while. Mus! sell $1,900 . . new structures . Free
Call 446·4394.
estimates. References.
675·2.UO.
1978 Suboru 4W D s!a!lon
~agon, bOdy and engtne
HOMEBU ILDI NG·Compl ·
need work; 4WD drive ete housebulldlng services
works excellent. 11,575. from foundation to roof.
cash or might take tractor, local builder with best
gravely-or truck In on trade references will build to any
ln . 61H9HU7, ask for stage or complete lOb. Also
Fred .
,room additions and
remodeling. Call H. s.
79 BRONCO, sharp, 304· Roclevl!ch, 304·576·2730.
895-3550, ask for Tony.
82
Plumbing
&amp; HNtlng
1980 Chevy Scolsdole 3 /4
ton, 4-wheel drive, 4 spd.,
CARTER'S PLUMBING
power steering, 28,000, g.c.,
AND HEATING
S7 ,OliO. Call 301-773-5150.
Cor. Fourlh and Pine
Phone .u6·J888 or .146·4177
1972 Volkswagen Bus. 882·
31A5.
13

Sofa · Sieepers.
quality
guranateed. Full $399.00.
Queen S499.00. FREE
DELIVERY Lilestyle Fur·
2 mobile hom es, 2 bdr ., one Furnished upstairs apt. 3 niture 3rd &amp;
Olive,
double- wide, one house . rms., and bath, adults only, ,Golllpolis. 446·3045.
Call675·3000 or 446·0682.
no pets, clean. Call 44615!9.
Whirlpool refrlgero~~tor
4 room house for rent or
frost free $95, Frigadalre
Sa le over look ing Ohio . Nice 2 bdr . apt,, furnished, refrigerator white $50, , Shotgun, Rem ington model USED wooden storm door, Want to trade 4 Case trac·
River. Phone -4.46·1615 or clean, Main St., Cheshlr'e .. avocado side by side 11·48, automatic. 20 gage, 5 metal storm. door, WOOden tor for cheap running car. ,:::::===;M;:::::ot:=o=rc::y=c:;:le=s==
4
storm window5, nine pane
446· !244.
References &amp; security dep. refrigerator $195, 30' Sears shot. like new. with case, solid WOOden door, 304·675· 30-4-615·4467.
For sale 197.4 Honda 554,
Caii24B8t8.
electric range 5125, Hot- $200. Ph. 2A5·5875, W. B. 4444.
point electric range .40' Boston.
S rm . house unfurn. in
135 MASSEY Ferguson lOIN milage, e)(tras, exc.
Eureka . Oep. required, no Ni ce large, 3 bdr . apt. f9r white $75, Norge heavy
$3250. John Deere 2010 trac· cond., S850. Call-146-00.14.
pets. C.all256· 1-413.
washer
$95, Stoves, closing out our en· .MENS black lealher coat, tor $3500. Chevy 14ston
rent in Rio Grande. Call duty
Westinghouse
dryer tire stock of stoves and size «1. 304-675-6917 or 615· pickup $1050. post hole
Honda XL 100 trail or
614·682 ·7056.
avocado
$95
.
.4.46·7391
fireplaces Inserts at dealer 1371 .
digger $250. 15 Ford pickup 1.stree•t, low mileage, good
5 room house in Gallipolis.
Skaggs Appliances at out cost, or less . OUtdoor
$2500. dozer TO 600. In· cond., s.coo. Call .u6· 1495.
Call after 5, 4-46·3945.
2 bdr ., apt., large living
ternatlonal $6,000. Other
I
location Upper River · Equipment Sales, jet. Rt.s S,S_ _,B:::U:::I!!Id::;ln:!lgLS::U::.PP=IIc:H:.__
room &amp; kitchen, no pets . new
farm mo~~chlnery. 30.4-576· 1981 RM 125 Suzuki, S850,
Rd.
beside
Slone
Crest
1
&amp;
35,
Gallipolis.
Ph.
446·
Very nice modern two Call446·3937.
Motel. we also haw a paris 3670. Closed Tues. &amp; Thur. Building materials. block. 2328 or 576·2606.
ex. cond . 1981. LeeNee
bedroom - horne . Com -~
department.
until Mar. 1, 1982.
brick, sewer Pipes,CI widen·
motor cycle trailer, $300,
1
11 1 1
pletely redecorated with
4 room
lurn.
apt. Court
e &amp;, eGrande,
c.
au 0.
ex. cond. Caii67H361.
full basement, garage, city 1 2nd.
Ave,
1 bachelqr
turn&amp;. ~O::~~~~~~~=J.:::::::::::;;;;:::;::~ daws,
Winters, n Rio
water and gas. Nice yard, apt. 1st Ave. Call 446·1615
Caii2A5·5121.
10 minutes from Gallipolis. or446·124J.
1977 Honda Goldwlng 1,000,
Do
It
Every
Time
------Nice neiQhbOrhood, close to
I dressed, 9,000. m IIH.
3x6 picture windOW with
school. Deposit and
44.1-1)6411 after 5PM.
screens,
.us.
Trlpte·track
Unfurn.
downstairs
apart.
references requ ired. Call
storm
wl
ndows
28x.46,
on Main St. VInton, Oh.
446·0173.
115.00 Call 367-0491 kyger,
Clean, 4 rm ., bat.h, large
Ohio.
yard &amp; porches. sec. dep. 8c
Nice 2bdr., home in city, rei. Call245·5818.
adults. no pets. Cal! 446·
16
Pots lor Silt
o9se.
Nice 2 bdr. apt. Call 256·
Young Tom Turkey's. Cell
POODLE GROOMING.
6506.
.146·9807 after 4PM.
76
Call
Judy
Taylor
al
367·
2 bedroom home In Mid7220 • .
dleport. Deposit required.
Bradbury Apartments.
REGISTERED
Polled
Call614·992·5914.
2nd. floor furnished ef·
Hereford bull, gentle, JO.I·
fiency, rental &amp; dep.
. 675-2347.
2. bedroom all electric ran· required, adults, no pets.
ch style home . 1 mile from 7'19 2nd. Ave. 446·0957.
Racine. References and
deposit required. Available .
1 bedroom apts. available
Nov. 15. Cal! 614·949·2849.
at Riverside Apts. Equal'
Opportunity Housing. Call
2 bedroom house, fur ~ 992·7721.
nlshed. . Brown's Trailer
Park, ,Minersville. 992·3324.
Available. 1 bedroom apt.
for rent. Contact VIllage
~· rooms and bath, full Manor Apts., Middleport.
basement, natural gn fur- · 99H787.
. n~ce. Storn windoWS and .
dOOrs. Some Insulation.
2 bedroom furnlo~
new pal"l. SIOVI
· 992-SGI,
992·5914 01'
•
refrigerator fUrnished . 992· 2$66:

PRIIHD8

7,30 ~- YOU ASKED FOR IT
ANOTHER UFE
.
tNSIDI! THE NFL •
.(() FAMILYFEUD
LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
AND COMPANY
(I)
NIGHTLY BUSINE8S
REPORT
!1DJ
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
illJ PHOTO SHOW 'Let The"'
Be Light' The uaa af light, Ita
. control and Ita creative
utilization Ia demonstrated.
@ •
ENTERTAINMENT
TONtOHT
.
r.aa ([) lANFORD AND SON
7•18 (}) !;!IN UPOATE NEWS
1:00 (J). (!) HARPER VALLEY
During Harper Valley Hlgh'l
25th claaa reunion, a former
achool chum of both Stall and
Caaale arrlveaand.aweape the
latler oft her feat, but there II ..
complication.
(I) NATIONAL QEOORAPHIC
SPECIAL
(])@ •
MOIIK AND MINDY
Spaca-auttedMorkplayacrlme
tJghtarto.wln Wlaarth'a reapect
and tllealnto an Orkan rage In a

BORN LOSER

-I MII.VIrt
8E
HELP

I·

IIOI'PI!T 8110W Guoll:

t&lt;lu~an.

PAl N.TI NG · Interior and
exterior, p~Umbing,
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs. exp. Caii:JIII.9652.

1

. K)
I
.
. . =:.=...o:.::.-". -- .. .

7•Ga (]) CAROL BURNETT AND
·

- - --·-·---

7" Datsun 8210 automatic,
304-675-3592.

I YUMMG!

Chrletopher Langha:m.

LEA6UE, .316•
· AVI!RI\&amp;E OF Z~
ROVNP T~IPPER~.

BING'S CONCRETE CON ..
STRUCTION • Specializing
In concrete · driveways,
sidewalks,
patio,
1975 Chevrolet Impala, 2 basement, garage floors
dr.,low mileage, exc. cond. and ett. Free estl mates. 11
Call446· 1288 alter 1PM .
years experle'n ce. Call 3677891.
78 Mustang II 4 cyl., PS,
PB, AC, AM·FM 8 track, FERRELL's
WINDON
new tires, sliarp. cau 446· GLASS SERVICE Home
78J8after 5:00.
malntalnance
and
remodeling. ·Phone 388·
1974 Plymouth A·1 cond. ' 9326.
Call446·1826.
,
.
French City Painting
1979 Dodge Omni 02~ auto., Residential; commercial,
p.s .• p.b., rear defroster, interior, exteriOr, paper
am·fm cassette, like new. hanging. and te&gt;eured
ceilings. Ph . 367·7784 or 367·
$3,800. 742-3154'or 992·7467 .
7160.
MORRISON'S Auto sales.
Henderson, wv. Phone 675· Coli .146·2801 for termite,
1574 or 675-2881.
roach, bird. rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
SURPLUS jeeps, valuel'es111Tlates. Bill Thomas.
$3,094. sold for S33. Call602·
941 -801" extentlo~ 7965 for A &amp; C Home lnsulotlon •.
Information on buying.
Inc. No JOb to small or:
1.11rge. 2 yrs. experience &amp;
71 CHEVROLET Caprice, tralning 1 • Work guaran _.
t~ed! ,Save up to 30 to 5(1 per
one owner, clean, PS, PB, cent
on heating bills. F,ree
V·8. Marjorie Grueser, 30.4estimates. Call 286·7171 or
675-4207.
286·57-40.

I•

lour J u -•
to IICh IQUiri, to 1om!

lour~-·

7:00 (J)e PIIIIAGAZINI
(}) WI!!KI!ND QARDI!NER
(])
!NTI!IITAINMINT
TONIGHT
(lJ HAPPY OAYUGAIII
.(]) TICTACDOUOH
(]) ® MACNEL-li!HRER
RI!PORT
NEWS
.

1965 Ford LTO 2 dr., hard·
lop, 351 engine, $1,595. Call
245-9375.

1977 CHRYSLER l&gt;(ewport,
29,000 miles, loaded, · PS,
PB. AC, AM·FM, cruise,
two extra snow tires, cleanno rust, $3,000. 304-675·1311 .

~!hoM

EVENING

1968 Dodge Polara, In gOOd -----~
cond.. with new motor, 4 CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
new !Ires, $150. Call 256· pet Cleaning featured · by
HaHelt Brothers Custom
1750.
Carpets. Free . estimates.
Call.u6·2107 .
1979 Pontiac Grand Prix
ex. cond., 30,000 miles,
AIC, $5,000 . Call 2A5·5575 WEATHERALL CON ·
CRETE · quality and ser·
after 5.
vice, caii67S·1582 .
«6· 7738 after 3:00
weekenclscall446·-4071.

one-

•

•

THURSDAY
N0¥.12, 11181

1974 Buick limited, $1,0110.
' STUCCO PI.ASTERI NG
Call .u6· 1241.
textured cell tnos, com1975 Mu1tang PS, PB: auto. mercial and residential,
free estimates. Call 256Caii2A5·5669.
1182.

~.:========:;==========178
Dodge
Omni
dr, H/B,
spd,
W/alr,
one 4owner
. Call4

~TNATICR••I'DWOIID·­
~ ~ ~~·
1&gt;1'--tndllot&gt;L.oo

VIewmg

JiM MARCUM ROOIIng
spouting .and siding, JO
years ex~rlence . Free
estimates. Remodeling.
Call388·9857.

1976 Flat, .. dr., 5 spd.,

ftft\}1.\rft ID'il

Television

STANLEY STEEMER
. Carpet Cleaning
.u6·G08

good, fully

I

More than 100 pieces of
brown underpinning tor a
mobile home. used just one
year. A seven and one half
feet by 58 inch wide oval
rug, and 'white uniforms
size 9·10. Call "*-"6-3065 after
4:30PM.

November 12,

•'

�----

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

Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio PTA warns
school boards
against attacks

Thursdav. November 12, 1981

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Ohio
Mrs. Winkle said incideniB have Communist, she said.
school boards to revile policies
Parent Teachers Association is war- .been reported in the Cleveland
"In Bay Village, parents sat in the toWard oulalde IJ'OIIIII-lt alao lll1lfil
ning scllool officials to gear lor a suburbs of Bay VIllage and Berea classroom every day and took notes oehool officials to prepare &amp;o handle
fight against what the PTA regards and . at the Lakota Board of and asked quesliON because the 8Uch.groups.
as unfair meddling in school Education north of Cincinnati in school board did not have 8 policy
business by ou!Biders.
BuUer County.
.
· that' controlled this. They didn't
Lakota school . board member
"We're gOing to try to make our
Mrs. Winkle said school . board have 8 policy for making apRobert
Brossart won re-election
members and school boards aware members .have been the target of poinlmtlnts to sit in classes or
despite an UIIBigned letter campaign
of this and make sure they have leaflets and verbal abuse.
.
notifying principals that they were branding him and his wife "oecular
policies to deal with it," said Tony
Groupo have demanded removal there," Mrs. Winkle said
humanists,'' ''anti-Christ'' and
Winkle of suburban Montfort of books from schools and libraries
A resolution adopted by the members of an alleged group called Heights, newly elected president of and the National Education . statewide group supports .making
the Ohio PTA.
Association haa been branded as decisions democratically and urgea "Knights in Devil's Service."

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

FRIDAY
~

$3995

CARHARTT

Voi.30,No.150
Copyrighted 1981

ANGEL TR~D

THERMALS

MEN'S QUILT LINED

SAVE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

MEN'S SWEATERS
.. . -

FLANNEL

Our entire stock on sale including cardigans · vests
and Slfpovers. Excellent
style. and color assortment
in S, M, L, X L and XXL
sizes. Ideal Christmas gift.

in-the-mail when you buy any 2 Hanes •thermal
undefflear garments.

SHIRTS
Plaid flannel with warm nylon
quilt lining. Western style in
sizes S, M, Land XL.

Men's $16.95
Sweaters ....... $13.93
Men's 519.95
Sweaters .. -.- ••• $16.33
Men's $22.95
Sweaters ••••••• .$18 ..83
Men's $29.95
Sweaters ••••• •• • $24.53

$23.95 Shirts_ .. _ .. $24.95 Shirts- -- -.-$26.95 Shirts -,, - ...
$29.95 Shirts- ..• ---

SALEI

Sale $18.68
Sale $19.46
Sale $20.99
Sale $23.36

SALE PRICES ·

WOMEN'S COATS
~isseS sizes 6 to 20 and ·extra sizes 14V2 to

24 112.

WOMEN'S
UNIFORMS

Preteen and Junior sizes. Wool blends · reve r·
sibles · sk i jackets. Zip·off sleeve jack ets. Dress
lengt hs, banded waist styl es, real rabbit looks
and sweater types . .Wonderful sty le selection,

45.00 :JUNIOR COATS.; ••••••••••• 135.99
159.110 JUNIOR COATS .••• ;....... 147.19
178.00 JUN lOR COATS ............ '62.39
sg}.QO JUNIOR COATS ............ .s72.79

$12.00
$16.00
521.00
527,00

TWO DAY SALE

·

Women's $39.00 Coats
Women's $60.00 Coats
Women's$69.00 Coats
Women's $84.00 Coats

•

•

Colorful plaid flannels in
western style. Boys sizes 8 to ·
20. You'll like the patterns and
colors .

. _. ,., •. • Sale $9.60
_.. __ .. _ Sale $12.80
_____ , _. Sale $16.80
, , .. _.. _ Sale $21.60

Jean~

Jeans ............

·SAUl

LADIES
· SLEEPWEAR
Sizes XS·S-M and L select group
10096. cotton flannel, assorted prlrits.

In-

Cludes long gowns · shorJ .,gowns and
·
baby doll Dormer sets.

Reg. $7.50 .Sieepwear
Reg, $8.50 Sleepwear
Reg. $11.50 Sleepwear

$11.91
$14.21
$14.91
$18.71

t

$5.69
$6.39
$8.69

Y SALEI

· sryi.. !W ·boys~ and

ELBERFELDS IN
(

Official under Japanese s.uspicion

CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber drawn Thursday night in the
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 394.
The lottery reported earnings of f547 ,539 on the dnlwing. The earnings came on salea of $937,8112, white holders of winning Uckets are
entiUed to share ..,,343, lottery officials said.
In the weekly, parlmutuel"Plck 4" game, the winning number was
0411.
Salel toll1ed tl07,51i6 on ·the ~ 'Pick 4" game. Holden of wtnniJig
Uckets are ent!Ued &amp;o 45 percent, or ,139,021. Betting Is in 1ncremants
'llartlng at 50 cents. A,ny winning •1 stra1g11t tiCket earns ...5M, and
any wtnniJig •1 boud Udtet earna fl.il.

ulria -

newborn to 24 monlhl - loci·
dlen2to4. S1zeulo6ancHto
14. lnctUdea bun ling 11e0 SUits snow suits - lackelo - droll
coats.

~lends,

Nylons. poly colton

rabbllfur.

Chlldfltl'l.fll.OO '
Cool Jaclctts -- ... . . - ,
Chlldrtft's $21.00 •
Cool Jtclcttl , , , .... - ,
Chll-'1 NS-00
,
CNIJidcttl ... " - .. ,
Chl-1 S40.00
~IJidcttl - .. ---- ..

y

'TOKYO- Tokyo pollee have wound up a top secret probe of brihery
allegations against a senior White House official, but are not releasing.
details, It was reported today·.
·
· .
U.S. and Japanese officials refllsed to comment on the front-page
report by Mainichi Shimbun, one of Japan's leading newspapers.
, The newspaper said the investigation by Tokyo police was requested
by the United States, but did not identify the origin or exact nature of
the request.
·
Nor did II Identify the target of the probe. Instead, it quoted an
unidentified diplomatic source as saying that the U.S. official Is il
"very Important member of the White House slafr' who was an adviser to President llejlgan during the presidential campaign.
The official also reportedly had "important posts" in the Nixon adrnin;,tratlon and met· several of Japan's prime ministers on visits to
. this country, the newspaper said.
·

Ohio lottery winners

.

..

OPEN FRIDAYS
TIL 8:00

$16.19

CHILDREN'
S .COATS
..
AND JACKETS

so.

Men's $15.9$ Dress Slacks
Men's $18.95 Dress Slacks
Men's $19.95 Dress Slacics
Men's $24.95 Dress Slacks

NEW YORK- Exxon Corp. is negotiating with the Libyan government for a complete withdrawal of Exxon's oil-producing operations
there and has relinquished the right it has held lor 26 years to produce
crude there.
Exxon, the world's largest oil concern, gave no reason for the action
in a brief announcement Thursday. The Libyan goverment was
notified of the plan last week, Enon said.
The company removed the dependents of its 83 American workers in
Ubya last swnmer. Spokeswoman Sarah Johnson said Euon was not
certain of the exact nwnber of Americans working there now.
Oil market specialists said they knew of no special circumstances or
recent events that would prompt Euon to leave Libya. Some
suggested the company had decided it simply did not need Libyan oil
- the most ezpensive among the Organization of PetroleUJ11 Exporting Countries - and preferred to avoid the risk of political
. upheava~in that troubhid North African nation.

J~tans

'7"
Sizes 29 to -42 and extra sizes o44 ,to
New
fall solid colors and Patterns. Most all lire
polyester · are well made · easy to wash
and arranged fo ryour easy selection.

Boys $9.95
Western Flannels __ . _. _. $7.99
Boys $10.95
Western Flannels _.. _. _. $8.99
Boys 512'.95
westerri Flannels . - - •. __ $9.99

Exxon to pull out of Libya

Children's $8.00
Jeans· •.•..• -• .... . . $6.79
Children's $11 .00
__ . ___ .. ___ .. $9.39
Children's $15.00
______ , __ • _, 512.79
Children's $19.00

'

MEN'S
DRESS SlACKS

FLANNEL SHIRTS

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - NASA said Friday that Colwnbia has
achieved Its most important goals and the shuttle is being sununoned
back to Earth on Saturday after 54 hours in space.

Denims - wool blends - corduroy .
Excellent selection.

M, L and XL sizes. Bright
plaid patterns - 1wo pockets full tails. E ~cellent quality.
Friday and Saturday Sale.

$15.19
$16.79
$19.99
522.39

LD

12 to 24 month sizes · toddlers 2 to
4. Boys and girls sizes .t to 6x and
'7 to l.t.

SAVE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

BOYS WESTERN STYLE .

$31.19
$47.99
$55.19
$67.19

CHILDREN'S JEANS SALE

s,

Junior sizes 3 to 15, Missy sizes 8 to 20
and extra sizes 32 to 42 . Wrangler, Levi
and Lord IsaaC brands. Natural
straight legs, boot cuts and great
srroaights in 100% cotton and stretc h
denims with lycra .

. Four indictments were hancjed 1state. Attempted murder is a felony possible penalty of not less than six
down following a session of the Sep- ., of the first degree carrying a mon~ nor more than five years in
tember term of the Meigs County possible penalty of not less 'than four prison.
Grand Jury Thursday.
years nor more than 25 Years in
Gibbs was charged with robll!!ry
Indicted according to the report of prison ..
of the Pomeroy Kroger Store on Oct.
Prosecuting Attorney Fred W. Crow
Crites was charged as a result of 22. He faces similar charges in
m, were: William A. Watson, 51, the shooting of Phillip Basmussen on Mason and Jackson Counties in w,
Reedsville, attempted murder; Lin- Nov. 3, this year, at the Good Times Va,, where he Is presenUy · baing
da D. Crites, 31, Middleport,
Lounge In Middleport. Rasmusen beld. Gibbs is currenUy on probation
felonious assault; Carol Y. Baker, · was able to appesr as a witneas. in Meigs County for an earlier
34, Middleport, theft, and Timothy Felonious assault i.'! a felony of the breaking and entering conviction.
Gibbs, !Jartford, robbery.
second degree carrying a possible Robbery is a felony of the second
Watson was charged wit~ at- penalty of not less than six months degree carrying a possible penalty
tempted murder in coMection with nor more than five years in prison,
of not less that two years nor more
an incident which occurred Aug. 'J:l,
Baker is charged with· theft, by than 15 years in prison.
this year, on Owl HoUo.w Road in deception, of monies from the Meigs
Each of the four people indicted
Meigs County at which time Craig County WeUare Department, the Thursday will appear before Judge
Foley was shot. Foley has since been amount of money being more that - John C. Bacon in the near future for
released from the hospital and ap- $150. Theft, as charged, Is a felony of arraignment of their respective
pesred Thursday as a witness for the the fourth degree carrying a charges.

Columbia returning Saturday

FlANNEL SHIRTS .

JEANS .

.

·

MEN'S $10.95 WRANGLER .

WOMEN'S AND JUNIORS

SALE! FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ·

Uniforms
Uniforms
Uniforms
Uniforms

.

Long lengths, car - coat lengths, short ·
jackets, quilted Styles. Some styles with

Junior sizes 5 to 15. Misses 6 to 20. Half sizes
to 26 1h. 100% poly.esters and cotton polyester
blends. Pant suits, dresses, lab coats, smocks
and slacks. All white - Crest and Guild
Professional .

1

. -

hOOds.

1 Section, 12 Pages
15 Cents
A Multi medii Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 13, 1981

Entire stock on sale including wOOd blends all weather coats · poplins and insulated
coats.

SALE PRICISI

JUNIOR COATS AND
.JACKETS

.

en tine

I

'200REFUND

'1 0.00 COZY BOOTS ........... '8.50
'12.00 COZY BOOTS ......... ~10.20

at y

'·

.,

· Made by Blue Bell in sizes S, M, Land
XL sizes. Shorts, regulars and longs.
Well made - of 50% polyester. SO%
cotton . Red nylon quilt lining. Navy
blue, brown and olive green .

Washable - pile lined boot - foam
cushioned. Sizes s, M and L in Red,
Navy, Burgundy, Snowcap. Patchwork
and floral print.

•

Meigs •Grand Jury
indicts 4 people

Hanes

'

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

"This package of $1.3 bUUon of
laJ:es Is baing borne Ill percent by
the conswner," Senate Minority
Leader Harry Meshel , I)Youngstown, sald. "The worting
Jl'?OI', the modest i.nc«ne people are

-

MEN'S INSULATED
COVERALLS

BROWN DUCK

Reg. 519.00 Jeans
Reg. $21.00 Jeans
Reg. $25.00 Jeans
Reg. 528.00 Jeans

indirectlY passad &amp;o consumers.

apected again to aboul~r the bur- conference committee made in the · year.
$11U million in&amp;o atate CCJftera.
den of the laJ: Increase."
laJ: package ortglnally proposed by
Legislators also impc8ed a new
The measure extends the sales tax
Meabel, who voted against the theHouae.
to repair and Installation services tax on the ale of syrup lor fuuntaJDmeasure, characterized It u "one of
Snyder and othe!'l said the not now covered, such u &amp;o cal'l, type soft drinks po~pouenta lllid
the moat onerous tax pachgea In the package was necwary to finance televisions or houses.
woo1d add about 1cent &amp;o the coet of
state of Ohio .. , (It) clop the noatrlls stale JOhilUUoql, "The fiscal
Increasing the sales laJ: Is projec- a lkunce serving. lnduatry ofof decency.''
health of this state Is In trouble," ted to generate. fl83. 7 million bet- ficials estimated extra costs of up to
Sen. H. Cooper Snyder, R- Snyder said "We'reoutofmoney."
ween Nov. 15 and the June 30, 19113, 8.5 ceniB lor the same amount.
Biancbester, who voted for the bill, - The comenttone of the laJ: end of the budget period. Expanding
Increases in the COt poiilte fl'lll'-·
traded barba with Mesbel. package that leglala&amp;on included as the laJ: to cover repaln and services ·chlse tax are- to produce an ld"Onerous? What we've !lone here ... part of the •13.6 bllllon ,stste budget is to produce an additional "-11-5 diUonal $91-5 milli!lll. Hlgber public
doesn't even bagtn to compare with bill Is the I-cent IIIII tax hike.
million, accounting for almoat fl utility ""else taxes ~ to generate
·The average Ohio household's bUUon.
what was aent over here by.
$77.5 million and the laJ: bill of Inshare of the extra penny sales laJ:
Democrat&amp;," Snyder said.
Exteru:li1Jg the 5 percent sales tax surance companies goeS 'up J26.9
It was a reference to ~ts a Joint alone is expected to be about $100 a - to cigarettes should pour another million.

e

FRIDAY-SATURDAY SALEI

SALE PRICES

ThoselaJ:es and othen generating
$1.3 billion are in a state budget bill
appproved by the Lep.Iature that
Gov. James Rhodes Is expected &amp;o
sign into law.
Increases in .corporate franchise,
public utility and Ina~ company taxes are also expecled to ba

'

SALE PRICES!

Bib overalls - lined jackets and coats ·.
insulated coveralls. Complete selection of sizes an'd styles in the famous
work wear by Carhart!.

By JOHN W. C11ALFANT
Asaodated Prao Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
Consumers lace the prospect of
paying more for goods - and some
services - due to taxes legislators
say are needed &amp;o keep state govemmentnmnln8.
The Legislature approved on
Thuraday an Increase of 1 cent in the
kents-on-the-doUar state sales laJ:.
S!nokers face higher costs because
the sales levy Is expanded to cigarettes, and fountain soft drinks are
likely to go up.

SATURDAY SALEI

SAVINGS ARE. --GREAT DURING THIS SPECIAL SALES EVENT
FOR FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13th AND SATURDAY, .NOVEMBER 14th
EXCELLENT TIME FOR .CHRISTMAS SHOPPING . USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN.

WORK CLOTHES

e

116.79
SlUt

State weather foreeasts

127-"

Clear tonllbt. Lowla.rlll.cSunny Sa~. lflsblln the upper 51111
&amp;o
11. Cbanee " prealpiQdllin . . . percelll toalght and
SaturJay. Wlndaaovlh I dts I) llqllloolcbl

Ul-"

nesr

OPEN

Ewl ''OMIPWIIAI-•....,IIaacb,._.,: Fllr
.-therlhrollgb the paiOIL .... ID the.,. .IIOtbeiOJr . . Sunday
and In the 1101 MondiJ al T IJro. Low~ Ia 1111 n+t .. 110 !be lc1Jr401.

TIL
.•

manager of tbe Oblo VaUey
Publishing Co., accepts plaque from Pomeroy Atty.
Bei'IUird Fultz, left. Looking on are Bob Evam,
president of li!e SEORC, and BIU CbOds, righ~ Mid- ·
die port.

maa, composing room

Markets
S~ttl~ .. f~l~"
Hoffn.um Meigs 'Man-of-Year'
$20million SEORC honors area leaders
CLEVELAND (AP)- Consumers
would get $3! million worth of free
food if a tentative deal to' setUe a
price-fixing suit involving three
supermarket chains goes through.
U..S. District Judge Thomas D.
Lambros aMounced tbe tentative
agreement Thursday and said he
will aUow the defendants to change
pleas in related criminal cases from
iMocent to no contest.
The U.S. Justice Department Indicted the chains for alleged pricefixing in some 145 supermarkets in a
seven-county area a year ago.
Civil suits, peruling for three
·years, were brought by the Ohio
Public Interest Campaign and two
individuals seeking $134 million.
"By lighting baek and not giving
up, conswners have won the largest
regional price-fixing settlement in
American history," said Cleveland
city counciiman Jay Westbrook, on
behaU of the non-profit OPIC. "This
$20 million setUement goes directly
to t million families in the seven
county Cleveland-Akron-'Lorain
market, and to needy families
through area food programs."
The defendant.: are First Natiooal
Supermarkets Inc., Fisher Foods
Inc., The Association of Slop-N-Shop
Supermarkets and four former or
cw-rent executives.
'A statement by the three chains
said the agreement would avert
"what would otherwise be lengthy
and costly ligitatlon." ·
.
"The defendants stressed that by
agreeing to setUe the cases they
were not admitting any of the
aUegation8 contained In the class action complaints," the statement
said.
The interim agreement, Lambros
said, provides that First National,
operator of Plek-N-Pay supermarkets.. and fisher Foods,
operator of Fazio's Supermarkets,
would issue coupons over five years '
worth $20 million &amp;o area consumers
they could redeem for food.
Stop-N-&amp;hop would provide the
equivalent of $1.3 million &amp;o the $20
mUUon total, Mid a Lambrol law
clerk, Suaan Guard
The value of non-redeemed scrip
would go &amp;o a court lund .a nd eve~
tually ba dlatri1llltld to charitll!l or
schoobi.
'
Lambrol said a coosent decree lor
the aettlemenl 1111111 be Ironed out
and a public hearing bald
Lambraa then would pve llnal approval of the aareen-t ud accept
the pleas of no contest In the

criminal cases.
' '

HOFFMAN RONORI!:D - Middleport Mayor Fred
HoffmaJI, secoud from lei~ was one of 1% southern Oblo
commaully leaden! honored duriDg Thursday night's
15th annual Southeastern Ohio Regional CouncU Awarda Banque~- held at the Univenlly Inn, Athens. Holf-

Mayor Hoffman, introduced for
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
was honored as "Meigs County's his award by, businessman Bill
Man of the Year" Thursday night by Childs of Middleport, has been in- .
the Southeastern Ohio Regional strumental in seeuring some $3~
Council during the 15th annual awar- million in federal funds for sewer,
ds ~uet held at the Ohio Univer- water and housing improvements
since becoming mayor, was a leader
sity Inn, Athens. ·
Hoffman, Middleport mayor since in the extensive improvements on
1974, and 11 other honorees from the the Page-St. project and secured the
various Southeastern Ohio counties million doUar apartment complex
were p~nted plaques by SEORC . which opened recently,
Hoffman, in acceptsnce remllrkS,
member Bernard V. Fultz, Pomeroy
credited the cooperation of vlUage
at&amp;orney:
Making comments prior to the in- -residents, council and other officials.
troduction of honorees was Robert for the achievements.
Mayor Hoffman and his wife,
L. (Bob) Evans,SEORCpresident.

Pauline, are the parents of four
children.
He heads the composing department for Ohio Valley Publishing
Company.
Others honored were:
Cecil Reisinger, Pike County ; Bill
J.?lngus, Ironton ; W. Daniel Adlef;
D.D.S., M.S., Hock1ngCounty; Miles
T. Epling, Gal)ipolis; J. Gordon
Morrow, Wellston; Daniel Washam,
Jackson; Dr. Harry. Crewson,
Athens; Ed Cottingham, Nelson'
viDe; Andrew Adelmann, Jr., Vinton
County; Robert J_ Stapleton, Portsmouth; and Mike Heavener, New
Lexington.

Stockman not out of woods, yet
WASIUNGTON (AP) -A repen- workable," Stockman declared.
acknowledged Thursday that StockBut Republican leaders say S\ock- man's job seUing budget cuts to
tant [)avid Stockman is out from
bahilld Ronald Reagan's woodshed rnan may have a struggle per- Congress won't be '~any · easier"
but not out of· the woods with a suading Congress that he remains a now. If the budget director's
Coll!!fe!IS that questions if he can true believer in Reaganomics. credibility "turns out to be a
ever again be a convincing economic Democrats said Stockman should problem down the road, conceivably
have quit, so devastating were his Dave may want to reasaesl! his
salesman lor his president.
A "very chagrined" Reagan rejec- statements.
situation," said Micbel, adding his
Among his most striking com- own opinion that "he's going to be
ted his apologetic budget director's
offer to resign Thursday after Stock- ments in the 23-page article was a able to overcome lt."
Senate Republican leader Howard
man renounced admissions of dOubt ·suggestion that the president's ·laJ:
and deception about the president's cut was a poHtical "Trojan horse'! Baker predicted that Democrats
budget and "supjJly-side" tax-cut designed mainly to tower tax rates would "have afield day" but agreed
,program in a series of interviews for the richeat Americans. He also that Stockman could ride out the
.publisl!ed in the December issue of confessed that "none of us really un- storm. Republican Sen. Larry
tlerstands what's going on with all Pressler didn't.
Atlantic Monthly.
·,.It l'tluld have been healthy lor
"David Stockman Is needed as a these (budget ) numbers .... We didn't
think
It
all
the
way
through"
David
Stockman to have resigned,"
member of the president's team,''
Reagan's
response
was
one
of
said
Pressler.
"It's going to. be very
explained a White Houae statement
·•grave
concern
and
dlsap·
difficult for him to have any
on Reagan's decision to keep the
man · who mastennlnded the ad- po\ntment," according to the White credibility up here th~ next time he
brings any figures up."
mlniltration's largely successful House statement.
The president expressed "parSen. WiUiam Roth, R-DeL, an
budget-cutting campaign in
ticular dismay at the possible original spcinsor of the "supplyC0ngl'll88 this year. Some administration officials went further, suggestion that his administration - - side" tax cut which Reagan later
suggesting that Stockman was too or any members of his ad- caUed his own, endorsed the
ministration - might mislead tbe president's decision to keep Stockvaluable to let him go.
"My visit &amp;o the Oval Office for American public,'' the statement man.
But at the same time, Roth issued
lunch with the president was more in said. "He (Reagan) st11ted
the nature of a visit to the woodshed unequivocally that he would not a tongue-in-cheek news release Inviting the budget director .to a
alter !IUPJMlr,'' the »-year-old Stock- tolerate any such behavior."
House GOP leader Roher! Michel
(Continued on page 12)
man told reporters of his face-toface meeting with the ] D-year-old
Reagan.
·
"He was not happy about the way
this haa developad, and properly so,
He was very chagrined," said the
An anned robbery~ Thur- received drugs alter forcing
s/lay at 7:211 p.m. at Nelson's Drug McLaughin to open a locked dn!i!
IIIUail)' confident budget ~r,
whoee ' voice quavered and hands Store, Pomeroy, according to Sheriff drawer. Five customers and three
trembled at tlnies u he 'recounted James J . Proffitt and Pomeroy other employes were forced IIi Ill! on
hil otfer &amp;o steP down "for my poor Pollee Chief George Stitt.
the floor during the robbery'
judpnentand looee taUt."
Atcordlng to the report an anned
·~ l'l!lfrom the front
"I am llaylnc on because I believe · robber apparenUy entered the rear ofAn
the store and both aubjecta exiled
even JIIOfe deeply that the president dOOr of the drug llore and accoated by the rear Into 1111 alley l•tftDI! 10
hu chaJ1ed a IOWid, conatrudlve pharmacist Ken McLaughlin and Second S&amp;reet. Only. ane baQd liUJI
coarse .... ! believe, abaolutely Mrs. Carol McLaughlin.
was aeen. The l'llbber) .Ia 111111r InbeUeve, that supply-.lde theory is
The robber demanded and ~Uon ..

'·~

Probe _arm~d robbery- here

.

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