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Page-14-T he Daily Sentinel

•

Thursday, September 24, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Judge terminates 27 cases

Twenty defendants were fined and
seven others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Richard VanMeter, Tuppers
Plains, $75 and costs, 10 days confinement, hit skip, $15 and costs,
speed, $150 and costs, 60 days confinement, hit skip, $50 and costs,
reckless operation; Arthur Gray,
Racine, $100 and costs, $50 suspended, confmement of 10 days suspended, one year probation, assault;
Bonnie Jacks, Marietta, $24 and
costs, speeding; Thomas Vititoe,
Hamden, $211, overweight; Kenneth
Valentine, Parkersburg, Donald
Schmidt, Athens, and Jeffrey
Swallow, Middleport, $21 and costs

each, speed; Mlldrew Hudson,
Pomeroy, $20 and costs, speed;
Richard Fitch, Gallipolis, $10 and
costs, failed to stop for stop sign; Arthur Roush, Racine, $10 and costs,
failed to yield right of way; Robert
Smith, Barboursville, $22 and costs,
speed; Larry Murphy, Wellston,
$195 and costs, overweight; Carolyn
Nicholson, Athens, restitution and
costs, insufficietn funds ; Karl Cui~.
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, failed to
display a valid registration; Gerald
Spencer, Lima, $23 and costs, speed;
William Parsons, Rt. 2, Racine and
Charles Ellis, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, $200
and costs each, three days coofinement,license suspended 30 days,,
1

DWJ; VU:ginia Ha~, Athens, $15 and
costs, failure to display registered
decal; Elmer M. Bowles, Middleport, $20 and costs, illegal turn;
Michael A. Mitchell, Mas~n, $200
and 'costs, $100 suspended, siX months probation, non-resident lice~e.
Forfeiting bonds were Cliffofll
Whittington, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, $200,
attempting to smuggle marijuana
into jail; Sharon Scarlett, Winston
Salem, N.C.,. $60.50.' s~ed; Claude!-.
te McCreedy, Gallipolis, Ted Lum,
Cincinnati, and Scott Baker, Coium:
bus, $40.50 each, speed; Lawrenc~
McKenna, Zanesville, $30.50, speedj,
Ricky T. Johnson , Pomeroy, $35.50,
failure to yield.

•

at

e

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Voi.Jo,No.ns
Copyrighted 1911

enttne

AllJUSTS EQUIPMENT - Charles Williams, a
General Telephone technician, adjust• new central offlee equipment being installed at the company's Letart
Falls olflce. The new equiment will upgrade the quality

of transmission tn and out of the office. Wllllams is a
resident of Racine. The proj ect is nearing completion
and will cost about $18,000.

procedures shall be followed, according to the directive issued bY the
Board:
"Each violation will be reported to
the principal promptly and in written form.
" First violation - five day
suspension from school, parents
notifed, and must accompany
student to school upon return after
suspension before the student will be

NEW YORK (AP)- Wall Street's
gloom hasn't evaporated in the wake
of President Reagan 's latest
economic address, but some
economists and businessmen are
urging patience and expect more
widespread support for the administration.
"Most people will feel it's not
enough," said Frank Mastrapasqua,
an economist at the Wall Street investment firm of Smith Barney,
Harris Upham &amp; Co., referring to
Reagan's proposal for cutti ng
federal spending.

penrutted to return .
"Second offense - 10 day suspension, ~barges of unruliness filed ill
Juvenile Court; parents must return
the student to school at the end of
suspensiol) before the student will be
permitted to return to classes.
" Third offense - expulsion;
maximum time permitted by law ;
charges filed in court."

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

The president said Thursday in a
nationally broadcast speech he
would seek an additional $13 billion
in spending reductions and $3 billion
in added tax revenues. That would
result in a fiscall982 federal deficit
of $43.1 billion, he said, compared
with his earlier projection of a $42.5
billion imbalance.
"Even if he gets those further

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FRANKUN, Ohio- Four person were arrested and 50,000 doses of
LSD were seized Thljl'Sday night at a large truck stop on Interstate 75

'

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COLUMBUS, Ohio - Unemployment in Ohio remained at 9.4 percent in August, even though July had surged a full point above the 8.4
percent reported in June.
The Ohio Bureau of Employment Services released its monthly
county-by-county unemployment figures Thursday, showing that
rural Adams Cot!nty continues to have the state's highest jobless rate.
But the county's total labor force of 8,523 workers is less than the number of people unemployed in a dozen other counties.
The bureau listed the national rate at 7.2 percent in August, compared to7.3 percent in July.

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O'Connor takes office oath

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'I1Ie seizures were made by the Dayton Police task unit and Franklin
pollee. Police said the drugs had a street value of $250,000.
The arrests and seizures were made in the truck stop parking lot, according to Dayton Police Sgt. John Perek.

WESTERN JEANS

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skeptical
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•Confiscate
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WASIDNGTON- Sandra Day O'Connor, swearing an oath spoken
by 101 men before her, is taking her place as the first woman on the
Supreme Court, promising to .. do equal right to the poor and to the
rich."
Mrs. O'Connor, an Arizona appeals court judge, was to be sworn in
during a brief ceremony today as an associate justice of the nation's
highest court.
President Reagan, who broke a 191-year, all-male tradition when he
appointed Mrs. O'Connor to the lifetime job, was among some 500
guests invited to watch as Chief Justice Warren E. Burger administered her oath of office,
Also invited was retired Justice Potter Stewart, 'the man Mrs.
O'Connor was picked to succeed.

Workers given greater rights

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~LAND , The wiriiiiJig number draWl\ Ttiilrs\lliy night In the
Ohio,LO«err's dally~
Nuinbe~" w&amp;a.,
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· The 1~ reporlj!d eerrilnga of $510;532;50 on the drawing. The ear11i111s caJ1le ill' sales Of "1,138.50,.while holc!eJl,of w'innlq tickets are
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· WARSAW, Poland- Parliament today passed a law giving workers
greater rights in naming factory managers, in a major compromise
between Poland's Communist government and its independent labor
movement.
..
The mll&amp;SUre passed the 460-member Parlianoent with no negative
votes, but 15 abstentions,. the official PAP news agency said. It gives
both the government and workers rights to name supervillors and says
disputes over chOices may be BIIbltrated in COurt; .
Both the Conununlst govemment. ancf the independent union
Solldlirity had Wjlllted full authority to hire a"nd fire factory managers,
but the union offe~ to compromise earlier thiS wee)!.
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WASHINGTON (AP) - If early
reaction from Ohio congressmen is
any indication, President Reagan 's
latest budget-cutting proposals may
fa ce tougher sledding than did his
earlier proposals.
"Coming only 60 days after we
gave the president practically
everything he wanted, this indicates
some of the rosy estimates they had
at that time were not justified," said
Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio.
In a televised speech, Reagan
called Thursday night for more
budget cuts.
Glenn said he was concerned that
a fact-sheet handed out by the White
House listed $74 billion in "unspecified savings" for fiscall983 and
!984.
The Ohioan s;lid he wants to see
" the specifics" in these reductions,

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they later ate, during a news conference Thursday on
Capitol Hlll concerning planned cuts by the Reagan administration in the school lunch program. (AP Laserphoto).

SAMPLE OF SCHOOL LUNCHES - Senate
MJnorlty Leader Robert Byrd, D-W. Va., left, and Sen.
Patrick Leahy, D-VI., show a typical school iuucb, that

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A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Gloom continues
on Wall Street

Meigs Board implements tobacco policy -.- - - - - - "
New regulations established by
the Meigs Local School District
Board of Education regarding the
use of tobacco on school premises
have been implemented. The rules
provide that a student shall not
possess, use, transmit or conceal
tobacco of any kind on school
premises.
In the implementation of the
policy, the following pattern of

1 Section , 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 25, 1981

··'

cuts, there is still a lot of concern (in
the financial community) that there
is going to be a wider deficit" in
later years, said Thomas Lawler,
vice president of domestic finance at
Chase Manhattan Bank.
The financial community has been
concerned that wider budget deficits
would keep interest rates high and
stunt the growth of the economy .
Goverrunent must borrow to finance
its debt, which means businesses
must compete with Washington for
the limited amount of credit
available. That force s interest rates
higher.
Jack Carlson, chief economist at
the National Association of Realtors,
said he expects Americans to
" protect tt. mselves against innation by getting their wage rates
up" in anticipation of wider budget
deficits beyond 1982.
And the National Association of
Manufacturers is urging its 12,000
member companies to move ahead

with capital investment to show confidence in the administration's
economic program, said NAM
President Alexander B. Trowbridge.
"It is most important that business,
labor , the media and the p~blic at
large show patience."
Others among the b~nkers,
economists, money manageJ:Il, stock
brokers and investors known collectively as Wall Street expressed fears
that Congress - facing the 1982 elections - would bow to political
pressures and not cooperate with
Reagan's plan.
The politi cal risks of trying to push
more spending cuts through a reluctant Congress are increased, some
economists believe, by Rea11~n 's unwillingness to make furthei cuts in
defense spending.
" If he doesn't show a willingness
to cut into his sacred cow, he can't
expect Congress to cut into its
sacred cows," said Dona ld Maude
'
an economist at Merrill Lynch &amp; Co.

Water district customers
given new rate adjustment
At a time when most utilities are
increasing their rates, the Tuppers
Plains Chester Water District announces a new rate adjustment will
go into effect with the October
billing.
Harold Blackston, president of the
board, said minimum amount for
the water bill will reamin at $10.50.
However, instead of 2,500 gallons,
the customer will be permitted 3,000
gallons of water before exceeding
the minimum charge.
This is an increase of 20 percent
more water that the customer will
have available without exceeding
the minimum.
While everyone in the system will
benefit in some way from this adjustment, the older residents and
others on fixed incomes will benefit
the most, because they are the ones
who generally use between tOO and
3,000 gallons per month.
This adjustment is made
primarily in order to promote better
meter reading, better billing
procedures, and to help reduce the
burden of the low water user.
There is a slight adjustment after
the minimum has been exceeded.
However, this entire adjustment
amounts to a lower water bill for the

great bulk of our rustomers .
Rates are as follows:
Old schedule: 2,500 gallons, $10.50;
Next 2,500 gallons, $7 .50; 5,000
gallons, $18 ; 1,000 ga llons, $2.60 ;

6,000 gallons, $20.80.
New schedule: 3,000 ga1Jot 1• ,
$10.50; Next 2,000 gallons, $6.70;
5,000 gallons, $17.2tl; 1,000 gallons,
$3.35; 6,000 gallons, $20.55.

Walkout continues in Gallia
GALUPOLIS, Ohio IAPJ - A
skeleton crew staffed the Galiia
County sheriff department's phones
as a walkout by 27 of its employees
over union representation and layoffs entered its fourth day today .
Norena Montgomery, wife of
Sheriff James Montgomery, sa id
Thursday night that no meetings
were scheduled between county of·
fi ciais and the strikers.
Twenty-seven sheriff's department employee~, lncluding deputies,
dispatchers and jailers, walked off
the job shortly after noon Tuesday .
That left Montgomery. Ius wife and
" chief deputy in charge or the
southern Ohio county, which covers
approx imately 474 square miles and
represents about 30,000 residents.
Each of the three are working
eight-hour shifts, Mrs. Montgomery
said. So far, only minor calb have
been received, she said.
" We haven't had any 1emergen-

ciesJ yet," she said.
The JOb action foll owed a regular
county

commi ssioners'

meeting

durin g whi ch commi ssi on ers
refused to recognize the deputies'
newly formed union , sa id Lt. Alva
Sullivan', a spokesman for the
strikers. Cmrunissiuners said they
also would not honor the union's
requests, he said.

Deputies voted Sept. 8 to organize
under the American Federation of
State. County and Municipal Employees. The vote preceded layoffs
of 15 deputi es in September. Three
others are to be laid off Oct. 2.
C01runissiuners cut $115,000 from
the sheriff's requested budget tlus
year. The department needs $68,500
to operate through J an. 1 at full
staff, Sullivan said.
The sheriff's depa rtment employees staged a brief sickout la st
week.

in the 12 percent across-the-board
cutbacks Reagan is proposing for
virtually all federal departments
and programs and in the elimination
of the education and energy departments.
"Where do necessary functions of
those departments go'" Glenn
asked. "I thought it (Reagan's
speech) represented an admission
that his economic proposals have
been thus far an abysmal failure ,"
said Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Ohio, of
Cleveland. "What he was in essence
asking the American public and
Congress to do now is to go along
with $16 billion in additional reductions from the budget in hopes that
somewhere along the line something
will happen to make his economic
program work."
"Over-all, this is not fine tuning,
this is a major overhaul of his
(Reagan's) economic position, a
quick retreat from his rosy predictions - but most of his predictions
have been off," said Rep. Dennis
Eckart, D-Ohio, of E;uclid.
"David Stockman predicted a
favorable economy by year's end,"
Eckart' said, " (Presidential) aide
James Baker said after the budget
· and tax votes that the President got
more than anyone expected. But
today we find the president agreeing
the deficit will be a gOod deal more
than·$42 billion."
Stokes and Eckart said Reagan
misrepresented the facts in his commelltl\ on SocialSecurity"
,
."Jl was ·not Congri!ssj It was his ~

.( Reagin's) request that t1JI, .•IZ2 ·
'. Jl1lnim\lffi pa_yment be eliminated,n

. ·., Slo~~eS·said. ,
.,
.
~· Mike Qzley; R-Ohio, of Findl8y, said he Ill!~ Reagan '• ~ ,
· mentsonSoclalSeclirity. · •.
.
. "1\houcllt,helald,~cardlon ~
table," OXley said, ''H~ p)lt It on tiJe,••
Qemocrats tCI .tmle •. toc~ all~
· · . ' '"!"'fGrasohltlon.,,
' ·. r ~
. rm'pleued, that he'L!J not usm); •
tile ~ ~Sicurlty system to help

lll_!ariCelhebiJdi!et." •

.

l

'f WOftK ON 'S CHEbuLE- Won oa the "Ciirleton
Sehoul," whlela bacludetl classrooms and an adult workshop for·.lhe mentally IJ&amp;Ddleapped \fl on sc!ledule.
)&gt;n;panaUen Is belq made to add the roof to the stna~
ture before ~ter. The Jiew $1.5 million laclllty is
located on the former Carleton Colle~te land In

Syracuse. Thursday some of the studenlii -who wlll be · ··
attendlq Carlel~n &amp;hool, when t•ompleted, weft.
given a grand tour of the facility. KMrr ConstnacUon
Company, Che.ster, is the general """tractor for the '
much needed facility.

L--·- -------------------------------J

�Commentary

So~elLl_______________________________Wr_m_
~m__R_B_~_k_tey_J_~

1Lhonnas
It is, so to speak, useful that
Thomas Sowell is a black, because
he is more conspicuous than he
would otherwise be, but if he were
Wy white he'd achieve singular
prominence for one very simple
reason, namely, that he is one of the
brightest men around doing the
sociological research relevant to one
of the nation's chief concerns. He
has two more books out, "Ethnic
America : A History," and "Markets
and Minorities" - plus a collection,
"Pink and Brown People." Few of
the planted axioms of contemporary
American thought on race and
progress go unchallenged.
Sowell's manner, whether addressing seminars or lecturing or
speaking on television, is itself
alluring - but, if the distinction can
be made, not trop1stic. He wants to
talk about his ideas on race and
progress, and he is in his quiet way
cholerically put off by misun·
derstandings . But his self·
sufficiency is such that one could
easily imagine his turning to the
history of the Middle Ages, or the life
of Scarletti, or the 19th-century
novel to absorb him .
In whatever fie ld, however, there
would be a certain no-nonsense in his
manner. He does not visit his

Mexican Amertcan and the Puerto
Rican is 18. Of blacks, 22. Of Jews,
46. So that lf one speaks ol
"average" income of the American
black, as contrasted with the
average income of the American
Jew, right away one should expect
that the average Jew would make at
least twice as much - because he is
older.
Then you need to ask such
questions as: How long has the individual competed in America?
Take the Puerto Rican in his 40s or
50s. He is earning 35 percent Jess
than the average white at that age
level - who grew up in America .
Whereas the average young Puerto
Rican who grew up in America is in
fact earning three percent more
than the average white.
How often do we hear that
American women earn 35 percent
less than American men? Right, but
Sowell goes on and asks that the
figures be actually comparable, in
which case one asks yourself, Are
there two kinds of American women
workers? To which the answr is,
well, yes. Those who are married
and those who are urunarried. Those
who are married are from time to
time taking leave to bear children,
to look after them. they are more often than not distracted by home
problems. wnen all this homework
is done, one discovers that unmarried women earn six percent
more than average men.
At the close of the world war only
!3 percent of black teenagers were
unemployed ; now that figure has
risen to 55 percent. W1lat happened

idiosyncrasies on his audience, but
one knows he has them; knows that
Thomas Sowell is not here to play a
role. The other night he said, in answer to one question, that he does
not conceive of himself as a " Dear
Abby for blacks."
There is much to ponder in his
books. But an effective beginning is
to listen carefully when Sowell says :
Ask the relevant question . Ask
whether there are other causes. Ask
whether all the factors have been
taken into consideration.
For example : Suppose one were to
hear - as one hears at most public
indignation meetings on the general
subject - about the relative poverty
of American blacks. One's instinct •
W1ly, it is to accept the datum, and to
f ret about the evils of
discrimination . Now Sowell, he pur·

sues the causes ...
Going over income figures he
notices that in all situations younger
people earn less money than older
people, for the simple reason that all
younger people are not Rolling
Stones. So decisive is this dif·
ferential that families headed by
persons less than 25 years old earn
half as much as families headed by
persons 45 years old. W1lat does this
tell us ' Well, the median age of the

Credit crunch
•
omznous term
NEW YORK (AP) - In many a fmancial conversation these days, Topic A
1s the risk ofa "credit crunch."
• The term is a vague but ominous one, evoking shadowy images of business
failures, layoff notices, defaults on debts coming due .
Wall Street analysts use it to explain the fears that have driven the stock
market steadily downward since spring. Business executives speak of it as
they contemplate the troubles afflicting the auto industry, home builders,
savings institutions, and some farm-equipment manufacturers.
A vocal minority of financial advisers invoke it in warning their audiences
to stick with safe investments that can readily be liquid• ted for cash.
In an economy that rests so squarely on a foundation of borrowed money,
there seems always to be someone proclaiming that the whole structure is
about to collapse. In the recent history of this country, those doomsayers
have been repeatedly wrong .
And right now, with the Reagan admimstration trying to take a radical
new approach to economic policy , financial for ecasting is an especially
chancy task .
Still, it is plain that concern over a possible credit crunch is more
widespread now than it has been for some time .
"The major fear depressing the stock and bond markets over the past
several months has been that the combination of a large federal budget
deficit and the Federal Reserve's tight-money policy would push interest
rates to new highs," says Edward Yardeni, economist at the brokerage firm
of E.F. Hutton x Co." At some point something would snap, creating a financial crisis.''
Whot that something might be is a matter of conjecture. In 1929, a collapse
of stock-market credit helped plunge the economy into the Great
Depression.
In the market for commercial paper - short-term unsecured IOUs issued
mainly by corporations - there was, at la st count, a record $155 .99 billion in
outstanding debt. An estimated one-third of that is held by some of the
money-market mutual funds, which have an almost unblemished safety
record but which carry no guarantees.
For his part, Yardeni believes the outlook has improved somewhat lately .
His reasoning, ironic-•lly, is based on signs of declining production and rising
initial claims for unemployment benefits - in short, a recession .
That's hardly cheery news on the surlace . But Yardeni argues that if the
choice is between a recession and a panic, he'll lake a recession. If
business"-' are indeed cutting back now, he says, "then a liquidity crisis and
a surge in short-term interest rates should be averted. Moreover, a decline
in interest rates suddenly appears much more likely.''
In the past couple of weeks interest rates have already started to come
down.
"The risk of a credit crunch has been diminished somewhat," Yardem
concludes. "But we're not out of the woods yet."

Today in history.

DAYTON, Ohio I AP ) - Further
cuts in the military budget would involve meat, not fat, says the chief of
staff for the U.S. Air Force.
Gen. Lew Alien told community
leaders at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base on Wednesday that he expects a 3 percent cut in the military
budget by the Reagan administration. And he fears Congress
may go even farther.
" We fully realize that a strong
economy is essential to a strong
defense," Alien said . But the United
States can afford to spend more
because Americans have the money,
he said.
Americans have spent more
money on alcoholic beverages

WASHINGTON (AP) - Housing
costs in August posted their smallest
gain in four months, the government
reported Thursday, and helped hold
the nation's annual inflation rate to
10.6 percent. While less than July's
sharp advance, last month's pace
was still ahead of rates posted
earlier this year.
August's overall advance meant
the inflation rate stayed in doubledigit territory lor the second
straight month, after falling below
10 percent for the lour previous months .

• •

"The class will now please come to
order. Today, chlldren, we will talk
about American agriculture. The
United States produces more meat,
grain, corn, dairy products,
vegetables and fruit than any country on earth. Thanks to our fanners,
food is one of our largest exports and
we are able to feed people all over
the world.
"Now, Johnny, can you name a
meat that comes from an American

farm?''
"Tofu."
" No, Johnny. Tofu is not a meat. It
looks likes meat, but it is made from
soybean curd."
"Lady in the cafeteria said it was
meat.''

"I'm sure she didn't say it w meat.
What she must have said was that
you are now entiUed under Department of Agriculture regulations to
have a delicious tofu instead of a
hamburger."
"It tasted lousy."
"Now, Johnny, you must undenrtand tofu ia an acquired taste.
Does anyone know what an acquired

Pomeroy, Oblo
llt-ttz-!151
DEVCYfED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

thing. · He despises dlsc:rimination
and acknowledges Ita Wstence but insists that all the questions, not
just some of them, he asked. It may
be arroganUy hopeful to do so. But
he is predicting that 50 years fm now
he will be considered an emancipator, not only of blacks, but of
whites.

impairing a planned arms buildup.
President Reagan recommended the
$13 billion in military spending cuts
over the three-year period, spread
across the Army, Navy and Air For-

ce.
Weinberger said the spending
decreases were being made not lor
military purposes but in an effort to
cut the federal budget.
According to Allen, military spending is needed to match the Soviet
military buildup in the past decade.
" The momentum of the Soviet
buildup in strategic nuclear forces is
particularly disturbing since this effort has begun to tip the balance substantially in theirlavor," he said.
The advantage has allowed the

Inflation was at an annual rate of
15.2 percent in July.
Transportation and food costs also
rose at a slower pace last month to
hold the seasonally adjusted inflation rate to 0.8 percent, which
would equa\10.6 percent if that rate
persisted for 12 straight months.
Last month's inflation rate was up
!0.9 percent from August 1980. For
the first eight months of this year, it
was 9.6 percent on an annualized
basis.
The Labor Department, in today's

Consumer Price Index report, said
housing costs climbed I percent, less
than the 1.6 percent rise in July, but
they still accounted for more than
half of the August change.
Home financing costs increased
1.8 percent, reflecting a 1.3 percent
rise in mortgage interest rates and a
0.4 percent advance in house prices,
the govenunent said. August's increase in housing costs was the
lowest since the 0.7 percent recorded
for April.
Rent shot up 1.2 percent in August,

This is the tale of two pitchers ... uh, two hitters ... This is the
tale of Bob Knepper and Bill Lee.
Knepper and Lee, a pair of lefthanders, earn their livings deceiving
batters from 60 feet, six ' inches
away. But the Astros' Knepper and
the Expos' Lee took charge at the
plate Thursday night, each belting a
home run to lead his first-pla ce team
closer to a second-half division pennant.
Knepper's belt was one of two hits
for the Houston hurler - he also
singled - as the Astros topped the
Atlanta Braves 5-3. Lee upped his
batting average to .380 with his
home run as Montreal took Pittsburgh 7-1. The Astros lead Cincinnati by 2'k games in the National
League West~ whlle Montreal is I'k
games ahead of St. Louis in the East.
Elsewhere, the Cardir.als felll4-6
to Philadelphia 's 20-hit assault,
which included an 11-run inning and
a streak of nine consecutive hits; the
Chicago Cubs gutlasted the New
York Mets Hl-9, and the Los Angeles
Dodgers beat the San Francisco
Giants7.J.
Knepper was plenty happy to talk
- trag - about his batting prowess,
even .though he raised his record to
94 and slands second in earned run
average in the league to teammate
Nolan Ryan, 1.85 to 2.00.
He teed ·off on Larry McWilliams
in the second inning to give the

taste is?"
"Something that tastes lousy."
"Now, I'll have no more of that
kind of talk in this sixth-grade etas..
An acquired taste is something you
have to get used to. When I was a little girl! didn't like spinach. But as 1
grew up I acquired a taste for it, and
now I eat It once a week."
"You ever acquire a taste for

tofu?"
"We didn't have tofu when I was a
little girl."
"You're lucky. It really tastes
lousy."
"Now let's talk about other things
farmers raise. Edna, name
something a fanner produces."
HMiJk,IJ

"Very good. Milk and other dairy
products are some of the most important foods for young growing
bodies because they contain calciwn
which your bones need to make you
strong. How many glasses of milk
should a young person drink a day?"
u A half a cup."
·
"No, Johnny. A half a cup is cer-

lainly not enough milk lor someone
your age.''
"Lady in the cafeteria said that's
alii could have."
"She was just following federal
regulations concemil1g school lunches."
"What's fedeial regulations?"
"Those are the rules the President
and his advisers decide the people
must live by. He had to cut down on
your milk allowance to save money
for the country."
"What does be do with all the mik
we ain'tallowed to drink?"
·
"It's made into buUer and cheese
and stored in warehouses all over
America, until it gets rotten and
then they throw It away."
"You got to be kidding.''
"No, Johnny. That's the only way
we can encourage fanners to
produce milk. By IJuyini up their
·surplus they're guaranteed a profit
on their milk. Shall we move on to
vegetables? Whattlnd vegetables
do our Amertcan fanners raise?"
"I know the answer to · that one.

or

Soviet Union to invade Afghanistan
and consider military intervention
in the Middle East, according to
Allen. That's one reason why
Congress must approve sale of the
sophisticated AWACS planes to
Saudi Arabia, enabling the free
world to protect itself fnm Soviet
movements in the area, be said.
Allen said the AWACS sale would
improve U.S.-Saudi relations, which
would allow quicker Amertcan intervention in the region if hostilities
erupted.
The Air Force also needs a new
bomber with a wider range and
more invesbnent in intercontinental
ballistics missiles, he said.

the largest increase in more than a
year. For the fifth straight month,
fuel oil prices feU.
Food prices were up 0.7 percent,
slightly below the 0.8 percent gain of
July, the department reported. But
prices for foods purchased in
grocery stores rose 0.9 percent, the
same as in July. The sharp advance
In food prices reflected higher prices
for beef, pork, poultry and fresh
fruits and vegetables. Egg prices
fell sharply to somewhat offset those
increases.,

By LANCE OLIVER
The Meigs Marauders head into
Southeastern Ohio Athletic Lea gue
football action tonight when they
travel to Athens for what could
become an aerial dogfight.
Both teams experienced senior
quarterbacks - Kevin Schwartzel
lor Athens and Bob Ashley for
Meigs. Friday's contest will be the
first real test of the Meigs secondary's ability to stop the pass. The
three opponents Meigs has faced this
season have thrown a total of only 17
aerials. The Bulldogs, under the
direction o! first-year Head Coach
Doug Hever, could throw that much
in one evening.
The Marauders have a talented
and experienced defensive back·
field, led by safeties Roger
Kovalchik and Bob Ashley. A threat
that is perhaps even greater than the
opposition is injuries .
The offensive backfield, the
Marauders' strong point at the
beginning of the season, will he
taking the field this weekend without

Warren Cromartie, and a tw&lt;&gt;-run
double and RBI single !rem Gary
Carter.
Cubs 10, Meta 9
Bobby Bonds' two-out homer in
the eighth gave Chicago its winning
run and third straight victory. The
Cubs smashed four home runs, twice
as many as New York's Ellis Valen·
tine, who drove in five runs.
Valentine's second homer of the
game had capped a five-run seventh
to give' the Mets an 11-7lead after Ty
Waller had socked a three-run
homer for the Cubs and Leon
Durham added a tw&lt;&gt;-run blast. Then
Jody Davis hit a tw&lt;&gt;-run homer in
the bottom of the seventh to put
Chicago back ahead before Valentine doubled in a run in the eighth to
tie it.
Bonds won it with his sixth homer,
of! Jesse Orosco.
Phllli"" 14, Cardluals 6
Sixteen Philadelphia batters went
to bat during the National League's
biggest inning olthe year. Eleven hit
safely and two walked. The Phillies
also had nine hits in a row - one
double and eight singles - the
longest such streak in the NL since
1930.
Bowa singled but was thrown out
stealing to end the second . Manny
Trillo then triggered the 11-run
uprising with a double. Winning pitcher Mark Davis bunted safely, Lonnie Smith singled home Trillo and
Pete Rose also bunt Bust It

CINCINNATI (AP) - University
of Cincinnati football Coach Mike
Gottfried has dismissed four players
· lor violating university and team
rules, an athletic department
spokesman said Thursday.
The four include sophomore defensive tackle Robert Fayton of Norfolk , Va.; sophomore split end Vernon Warren of Jacksonville, Fla.;

sup."
"Well, it's true that the Department of Agriculture declared the
other day that catsup wu a
vegetable, but fanners don't raise it.
They raise tomatoes and afterwards they are sqiiiiSbed up and
put Into bottles as catsup. Then
people like yourselves put the cat&amp;up
on your hamburgers to make them
taste better."
"Lady In the cafeteria wouldn't
give me no hamburger."
"Well, then, you can put catsup on
your tofu."
"I did, butltstlU tasted lousy.''
"Johnny, you have dlanipted thl.s
c1asa enough today. You will ~Y ifter acbool and write 100 tiJne!,m the
blackboafd, 'America Pr9duces
more food than any coantry' in the

two key players due to injuries .
Junior halfback Mike Jackson suffered a separated shoulder in last
week's confrontation with Wahama
and is sidelined for most of the
season. Fullback Greg Bush, still
recovering from a nagging injury,
will play only on defense against
Athens, expected to see limited action at the l'nebacker position, according to Me~gs Head Coach
Charles Chancey.
"We are at the critical point with
injuries," admitted Chancey. "One
more and we will be in bad shape."
Despite Meigs' lack of depth, the
locals were picked to finish third in
what many see as a weak SEOAL.
Two polls, one of sportswriters and
broadcasters, the other of head
cOitches, came up with the same
predictions lor the top lour spots in
the league - Ironton, Jackson,
Meigs and Gallipolis in that order.
"Ironton is in a class by itsel! this
year," Chancey said. "The rest of us
t·ould end up in a race for second
place.
"If we were 100 percent healthy , !
would feel very good about this
team."
Total statistics for Meigs' first
three games show the Marauders
besting their opponents in every

.&lt;inglc statistical category except
ya rds rushing , despite their 1·2
record.
Determination and a lot of han·
dsoff have made :i-1, 1611-pound
seni or Kovalchik the leading rusher
for the Marauders with 252 total yar·
Lis.
Ashley has amassed respectable
figures at quarterback, completing
20 ol48 passes for 305 yards with four
interceptions and four toucl1downs.
R1ck Chancey has been his favorite
targt'l and has accounted lor more
than half of the yards ga ined
through the a1r as well as three of
the TO strikes .
Even more impressive is Ashley's
43.5 yard punting average.
The Marauders have outscored
their opponents 45 to 43, scoring
more and allowin~ fewer points in
the second half. MHS has also
gained 717 total yards and 42 .fir&gt;1
downs compared to 553 yards and 23
first downs recorded by opponen\.'i.
These statistics make the
Marauders' record seem more
disappointing, but the beginning of
SF.:OAL play gives Meigs a "second
sL'ason" in which they can start
arrcsh in the standings.

The Mci gs·Aihcns tilt is scheduled

to bt'gin at 8 p.m.

Suspend players

Catsup."
"Catsup is not a vegetable, Johnny."
"Lady in the cafeteria said it was
a vegetable. She said I was entitled
to two vegetables; potatoes and cat-

world today."' ,

an

1}-2 piiCh
Astros a 3-0 lead, hitting
a few feet over the right field wall
down the line.
"I've claimed all along that I'm
one of the most feared left-handed
power hitters in basehall," kidded
Knepper. " I'm sure most pitchers in
the league wish they could walk me
or pitch around me," added the pitcher who had all ·ot five hits this
season entering the game.
"I've got to kf\'P my hitting under
wraps or they might put me out in
center field or at shortstop or
somewhere where I'd have to play
every day.''
Knepper's first home run was in
1978 in San Francisco against Allan·
ta's Phil Niekro.
"The wind was blowing in or I'd
have hit it about 500 !eel. I just
muscled the ball outta there," he
claimed, a big smile creasing his
face. '' The fan who caught it had to
go to the hospital.
Knepper went 72-inning'l. giving
up fe hits, and walking four.
The Astros scored twice in the first, with Tony Scott's double and Art
Howe's single accounting for the
runs. Howe's triple in the third and
Gary Woods' sacrifice fly brought in
the other Houston runs.
Expos 7, Pirates 1
Lee also went 72-3 innings, surrendering six hits. His home run came
when he led off the fifth inning. Montreal also got four hits and three
runs seored, plus a solo homer, !rom

Marauders battle Athens
in SEOAL opener tonight

"Aw, come on, fellows- one tor the Gipper."

during the past live years than the
federal govenunent has spent on the
Air Force, Allen said. In addition,
annual casino gambling receipts exceed the yearly fuel bill for the Air
Force, he said.
(!These, as comparisons, indicate
it is not a matter of affordability,"
he said. "It is a matter of national
commiiment to rebuilding our
defenses.
" It (the expense of defense) is the
cost Of a loss of freedom which would
be unbearable."
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said Wednesday that $13
billion is "the maximwn" that can
be cut !rom the military budget
durin~ the next three years without

~mAP Wire&amp;

junior cornerback Reggie Wilson of
San Francisco; and junior defensive
tackle Phil Evans of Laverne, Calif.
Gottfried would not comment on
the dismissals or say what rules
were broken .
Of the four, only Fayton had
played much this season. The Bear·
cats are winless in three games .

Publltbet

BOB HOEFLICH
GneraiMIIDIIer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
A "MEMBER of TH AIHe ..kd Prell, IlllaDd DaUy Prall Aaotillttea •DII the

Amerle. . Nnnpaper hbUIIIen Auocllltfoll.
~elton

'

.J

Allen Pape
111 pound
Senior Lineman

Joe Rob Hemsley
155 pound

C. T. Chapman
252 pound
Senior Li

Senior Lineman

Royals overtake Oakland
for lead in AL West race
By Associated Press
The Kansas City Royals, who
should know what a pennant race
feels like since they captured the
American League West four times in
the last five years, say the
ingredients are missing this year .
"It dllfSn 't seem like a pennant
race," said Willie Wilson after he
knocked in two runs with a single
and B triple in Thursday night's 9-2
victory over the Minnesota Twins.
" It seems like it should be August or
the late part of July. We just have to
force ourselves to go out and play
hard because every game counts."
"This a very unusual year. We can
finish second and still get in the
playoffs. It's kind of weird," said
Dennis Leonard, who notched his
lourth triumph in his last five starts.
" The top two teams, Oakland and
us, are not even fighting it out. It's
us against Minnesota and Te:&lt;as."
Leonard was referring to the fact
that the Royals can get into the
division playoffs by finishing first in
the second-half race or by finishing
second behind Oakland, the firsthalf winner.
The Royals now have a hall-game
lead over Oakland, which was idle
Thursday. The third-place Twins fell
31-'z games back.
In other AL games, Oeveland beat
Boston :i-2, Baltimore tripped New
York :i-1, Seattle outlasted Te:&lt;as 2-1
in 11 innings and Chicago defeated
California 4-1.
The Royals, who had scored just
nine runs in their previous five
games, raked four Minnesota pitchers for I 4 hits to break the hitting
slump.
"We've been getting the hits but
just not at the right time," said U.L.
Washington, who had one o! live consecutive Kansas City singles during
a four-run second inning. "It's tough

to win with just two runs a game."
"I'm just like the players. I like
big innings too," said Royals
Manager Dick Howser. "But they
just don't come that easy."
Amos Otis joined Wilson with two
hits and two RBI lor Kansas City.
Otis had a tw&lt;&gt;-run homer, stole a
base and scored twice.
Kansas City's four-run second innlng was at the expense of loser
Brad Havens, 3-0. It consisted of RBI
singles by Dave Chalk, Washington
and Wilson and a bases-loaded walk
to Willie Aikens.
The Royals also had a four· run six·
th on Wilson's RBI triple , Frank

W1lite 's run·scuring double and Otis'
ninth homer.
Dave Engle hit a leadoff home run
in the eighth [or Minnesota.
Indians 5, Red Sox 2
Cleveland kept Boston from
moving into a first-place tie with
Detroit in the East as Mike
Hargrove and Toby Harrah keyed a
three- run seventh irming.
With the Red Sox ahead 2-1,
Harg rove tied the score with a single
and Harrah doubled home the
second run of the 1nning. Hargrov e.
Harrah and Ron Hassey all had
three hits for the Indians.

~-------_;,---------------.,­

Cam de~
'Pari\_
Camden Park
will be
reserved
Saturday September 2ft
for the entire day for
1roup outlnl•·
Armco Mlnes••. untll 4 pm
United Steel Workers ol
Amerlca .•• 4·10 pm
Koute 60 Wnt

Huntln~on,

W.Va.

THERE'S STILL TIME TO ENROLL!!

PLAYER OF WEEK - Bob
ABllley, sealor quarterback and
defeasive ' balfbaet, 1m been
seiected Bll lbe Meigs Jaycees
Player of lbe Week. Asbley
bel~ lead the marauden to
lbelr lfrlll .victory of lbe season

ag&amp;lUt Wabama.

IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE
NOVEMBER 3 GENERAL ELECTION
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED BY
OCIOBER 5th
· IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED: VISIT
r THE BOARD'S OFFICE IN PERSON- ORPHONE THE BOARD OF ELECTIONS- OR
. -MAIL THE BOARD A CARD.
Also, if you move you must notify the county office.
Or ifI you are in doubt as to whether
•
'
you i)re properly registered, phone the board.

·•

'

N....Edltor

Southern's varsity squad

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD
-OF ELECTIONS

ROBERT L. WINGET~'

LE1TER8 OF OPINION are wek 1m ell. ne, lltCIIII4I be • tUa • wordlloq. AU
on ..~jed to-ud-beolpodwllii...,.,- .......,.._...,_
ber. No_.,.._,. will be P I -· Ldlon ,._be la1ood IMie, ..........

the pUght of emigrants, decreed that
their conditions crossing the ocean
should be better. What they did was
choke the flow - because emigrants
couldn't alford the passages. that,
says Sowell, is why so many
minorities struggling up the ladder
have preferred corrupt politicians
who know reality, over against

NL leaders increase leads

Why Johnny can't eat_____Art_B_~_h_wa_td

l1l Court Street

.u.w..t Pabii.JbtriC011troller

as giving you jobs at higher wages. theoriats who don't.
His books are full of thiB kind of
The British, In a spurt of concern for

August housing costs post smallest increase

The Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD

in between - except a lot of social
and dvil rlght.s legislation? Nothing.
Well, what about such legislation.
Well, yes. The minirnwn wage.
Sowell ia terribly impatient with
people who are better off then their
intended beneficiaries and proceed
to pa&amp;'l legislation that makes life
worse for the Intended beneficiaries.
To pa&amp;'l a law preventing you from
working at low wages isn't the same

Air Force chief opposes additional cuts

Today is Friday, Sept. 25, the 268th day of 1981. There are97 days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Sept. 25,1513, Spanish explorer Vasco Balboa crossed the Isthmus of
Panama and discovered the Pacific Ocean.
On this date :
In 1962, Fidel Castro revealed that the Soviet Union planned to establish
a base in Cuba for its fishing fleet.
In !966, two typhoons hit Japan, leaving more than 300 people dead and
missing .
In 1972, Japan's Premier Tanaka arrived in Peking, becoming the first
Japanese premier tosetfoot on Mainland China since World War II.
And in !973, the three-man crew of the U.S. space laboratory, Skylab 2,
made a sale splashdown in the Pacific Ocean after a record 59 days in orbit.
Ten years ago : Retired Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black died at the
age of ll:i.

IIIDel, •~~«~md'UII.

Page-2-Tohe Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlepart, Ohio
Friday, September 25, 1911

The Daily Sentinel- Page-l

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 25, 1981

MASONIC TfoM .. LE' BUILDING
P.O. Box 488, Pomeroy, Ohib45769
. .
,.
, PHONE 992-2697 . ,
Regular Hours: 1:30-4:30 Mondays th~ough Friday
ADDITIONAL HOURS FOR REGISTRATION
Friday Evenings, ~ep mllMr 11, 24, october 2, 6 p.m.- ·9
p.m.; !Saturdayi, SepljmllMr ' ' ' 25, ~tober 3, 9 a.m.-12
noon; Monclay; October~ 5, 9 a.m.·9 p.m.
'
'

I

I

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

ONE STOP ENROLLMENT
SATURDAY, SEPT. 26
HJO A.M.-12:00 NOON
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA, 529 JACKSON
Gallipolis Business College makes it easy to prepare your career lor the 80's with '
ONE STOP enrollment. You can apply, register lor classes, apply for Financial
Aids and even buy our books, in just ONE STOP. Enrollment for GBC 's :
programs and courses in Business, A.ccounting, Secretarial and Computer,s is
still open tor Fall Quarter. Classe "egm Monday, September 28.
·
Reg . No . 75 ·02-0472.B t

I •

..

.

••

�•
Page-4-The Daily Sentlnet

Pomeroy

,

•

Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 25, 1981"!

Fan Hanover winner

Fisticuffs, controversy
highlight annual jug race

ROLLING OVER - Driver Eddie Lohmeyer roDs
away from hls wrecked cart as pacer Landslide breaks
down on the backstretch of the rirst heat of Thursday's

Uttle Brown Jug race in Delaware, Ohio. The wreck,
first In the history of the race, knocked several horses
out of the running. lAP Laserphoto) .

Unbeaten Bucks battle Stanford
STANFORD, Calif. !AP I - The
Stanford football program , depen·
dent on strong-armed quarterbacks,
made its pitch for Art Schlichter
four years ago.
: " I was recruited by Denny Green
and was going to visit Stanford. But,
it ended up I didn't," recalls
Schlichter, the Ohio State senior who
will le ad the e1g hth-ranked
Buckeyes, 2-j), against Stanford on
Sa turday. " I decided I just didn't
want to go far from home."
Stanford, which will begin its
Pacific·IO schedule next week, is off
to a disappointing 1).2 start. But
75 ,000 or more fans will be in Stan·
ford Stadium on Saturday to see two
of college football's best quar·
terbacks, Schli chter and John
Elway.
Green, now head coach a t Northwestern, was a Stanford assistant
when he went after Schlichter, the
Ohio farmboy w1th a sensational
passmg record in high school. Stan·
ford could offer, besides a scholar·
ship, itsreputati on for turning out
great passers sueh as Frankie
Albert, J ohn Brodie a nd Jim

Plunkett.
Instead, Schlichter took the offer
from Ohio State's Woody Hayes,
whose qu" rterba cks spe nt most of
their time handing off to power·
running fullbacks. The Buckeyes
have passed a lot more, under Hayes
and successor Earl Bruce, the last
four seasons but Schlichter has
averaged less than 20 attempts per
game.
" I'd love to pass 30 or 40 times a
game, to be honest," the quar·
terback said. " If they told me I was
going to throw 40 passes , I'd
proba bl y say 'Thank you,' and then
pass out.''

The Stanford Cardinals ofte n
throw 40 times. Elway, who passed
for a conference-record 27 to uchdowns last season as a sophomore,
opened this season by hitting on 33 of
45 attempts for 418 ya rds in a 27·19
loss to Purdue. He came out of that
game with a sprained ankle, and in
last week's loss to San Jose State, he
was a miserable 6 for 24, with five in·
terceptions. before going to the ben·
ch.
"I figure I'll be back to 95 to 100

percent by Saturday," Elway said
after h1s first workouts this week.
Schlichter passed for 155 yards
a nd a touchdown against Michiga n
State before suffering a sprained
ankle last Saturday. But he, too, is
expected to be okay Saturday.
" He's a fast healer. He could have
played more last week. He wanted to
go back in," Bruce said.
The Buckeyes scored early on big
plays in their first two games. Tim
Spencer had an 82-ya rd rWl against
Duke and Schlichter hlt Gary
Williams on a 46-yard touchdown
pass last week.
Stanford 's longest gain so far is a
4().yard pass play. Darrin Nelson ,
the tailback who averaged 5.9 yards
per carry his first three seasons, has
a 3.6-yard rushing a verage so far
this year.

By GEORGE STRODE
DELEWARE, Ohio (AP) - The
36th Little Brown Jug was full of
these firsts : fisticuffs, controversy,
two accidents that sidelined more
than a third of the field and II filly
champion, Fan Hanover.
The daughter of Albatross rallied
twice Thursday to win the final leg of
pacing's Triple Crown. She won the
second division in I :56 3-5 and the
raceoff in I:58 4-5, prompting her
driver, Glen Garnsey, to proclaim:
" She's the best filly of all time,
because she raced and beat the best
colts of her age. She's got so much
determination, you can't believe it."
These were the developments that
tried to upstage her victory at the
Deleware (Ohio) COWlty FairgrOWl·
ds:
- Fisticuffs between drivers Ben
Webster and Jim Marohn that led to
a judge's hearing. Webster was
fined $5() for assault annd Marohn
was s uspended 10 days for careless
driving, presiding Judge Bob Steele
said.
-An appeal to the Ohio Racing
Commission by Wildwood Jeb
owners over the purse distribution .
They contend they should be entitled
to a share orthe fifth-place money.
- The accidents, caused by breaks
in stride on the back stretch, led to
seven horses in the record 19-horse
field brea king stride and not
finishing their races.
Still, it was Fan Hanover 's day .
The record crowd of 45,907 watched
her whip the colts in her first test
ever against them on the first day
she was required to race two
grueling heats.
Garnsey said he had some racing
luck in avoiding the raceoff accident
begun by Wildwood Jeb, driven by
Marohn, and Seahawk Hanover,
with Webster in the sulky.
Those two horses , as well as Slap-

cepcion.
Concepcion refused the $4 .5
million, five-year pact plus guarantees offered by Dick Wagner, Reds
president.
Wagner rejected the proposa l of
Concepcion 's agent, .J erry Kapstein,
asking further guarantees and $5.25
million .
However. Kapstein on Thursday
spe lled out two proposals in a San
Diego, Calif. , ne"(s conference
before the Reds flew to Atlanta for a
series opening tonight with the
Braves.
One proposal, which contains
similar guarantee language to
Wagner's, involves a $5.25 million
package over five years, includin g a
$750,000 signing bonus . The other ,
which includes further gua rantees,
is worth$4.630 million.
"A guarantee is an a llocation of

risks," said Concepcion's attorney,
Bob Teal. "Because of the dif·
fe rence in the guarantee language,

Thistledowns results
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP) :With Gary Cooper at the reins, Joker
:Joseph, the odds-on favorite, easily 0
·captured the featured allowance
:race for 2-year-olds Thursday at
.Thistledown.
: Joker Joseph went the mile in 1:39
+li and paid $3.40, $2.441 and $2.20.
:Chief Joy fini.shed second and retur$2.60 and $2.20, and third-place
:Marty's First paid $2.441.
• The I~ combination of Drtve
\Joy, A Fox and Montana Winds
:returend $305.441 in the last race

:nect

ltrifecta.
The crowd of 3,047 wagered

1

· ~.891.

SUNDAY MATINE
SEATS $1.50

owner, and
Marohn engaged in a
shouting
match.
"You're going to kill somebody .
You're a menace on the race track,"
she shouted at Marohn. " You did the
same thlng to us in the Cane Pace."
Seahawk Hanover won The
Messenger, the Triple Crown's first
leg, while the Cane Pace, the
crown's second jewel, was won by
Wildwood Jeb earlier thls year.
Wildwood Jeb's owners are al&gt;'
pealing a Jug regulation that says
the fifth-place money must be
divided among the horses that did

--

----

l'rom Wtrn.r 81 01
g._OD••Warnt~
r Communott toon• COI'I'Ip.ln~
•w-"'" ., .......,,..,......,

r-,ril~~~~~~~~,~
531 JACKSON PtKE ·Rt.35 WEST
Phone 446· 4524
.
BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEAT$ JUST S I. SO
ADIAISSION EVERY Tli£SO.tY $1.50

FRIDAY thru THURSDAY I

SEPT 25 thru OCT 1

'

paigns.
Deploying a wide open attack, the
Bobcats have posted back·t(}-back &amp;5 efforts and could become the only
2.0 team in the Mid-Ame rican by
avenging last year's 37-18 loss to the
Cardinals.
Ohio currently shares first place
with title favorite and defending
cha mpi on Central Mi c higa n,
Western Michigan a nd Toledo. The
last three schools, however, are involved in non-conference assign·
1nentsSaturctay.
The only other game in the MicJ.
American this week sends Miami to
Eastern Michigan at night.

Electa Circle

HOUSIN.G REHAIIUTAnON GRANTS
FOR LOW AND MODERA TE·INCOME RESIDENTS
ARE NOW AVAILABLE

A visitation program was initiated
at the recent meeting of the J;:lecta
Circle of -the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society of the MicJ.
dleport First Baptist Church
meeting at the home of Mrs.
Elizabedth Searles.
All women of the church are invited to participate in the visitation
which will be carried each Friday at
I p.m. leaving from the church.
A think you note was received
frqm David Stone, home missionary,
for a birthday gift, and plans were
made to send gifts of money to Dr.
Roger Getz of Thialand, for his bir·

'

"Changing Family Patterns" was
the program topic
"Changing Family Patterns" was
the program tope with emphasis on
the role of the church, life of the
single person, the unmarried
mother, the nursing home patient,
and persons who live alone.
Rhoda Hall had prayer, and
devotions were given by Mrs.
Searles who gave a commentary on
a talk by Ruth Berry McKiimey
made at the Women's Conference
and dealing with " Proof of the
Spirit." Miss Hall will have
devotions at the October meeting of
the B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Society.
Refreshments were ser;ed to
those named and Vesta Tuttle, Flora
Marie Gibson, Clara Bell Riley,
Mary Ann McClung, David Riggs,
Kathy Riggs, circle chairman, Ethel
Hughes, Mary Brewer, Katheryn
Metzger, Gwinnie White, and Freels
Hood.

SYRACUSE The Willing
Workers Missionary Society of the
Church of God, Syracuse, met recen·
Uy with Ethel Hassler, vice
president, presiding. Lenora
Jenkins had the opening prayer and
Mrs. Hassler read Titus 2. Virginia
Oiler gave lbe secretary-treasurer's

BODY
I IL \ I"
• r!r. •

g

tilt

"'{' ''

H

,, r

:.·Methodist
.,.
·' women
The Clifton United Methodist
Women met at the home of Mrs.

PROGRESS

,Catherine
Sept. 15Watkins
with Mrs.
Smith and Smith
Mrs. Kenneth
as

SALE ENDS
Sat., October 3rd
HURRY
INI

hostesses.
( "Simpler Life Styles" was the
topic, based on TV Interview-type
program by Mrs. Mary Capehart.
.Elizabeth Mcintosh led the group in

'

110 W. Main St.
992· 2811

Since 192'?
Pomeroy, Ohio
I
M·S 7:30toS:OO
''

It is time! The degree of drug
abuse in thls commWlity and in
our schools is a major concern
that I believe must require ac·
lion. A goal I s ubmitted to the
board of education at the last
meeting as a district goal was "to
review and rev amp the
disciplinary procedures used
throughout the district." Under
this goal would fa ll the need to do
some major work in the areas of
drug and alcohol abuse.
My concern is over the
prevalence today of chemical use
and abuse in our schools and
communities. We are finding
more and more evidence of yoWlg
people who are experimenting or
who are dependent upon drugs
and/or alcohol.
It is a fact that every child will
be fa ced or tempted with the opportWlity to become involved in
chemical abuse situations. I am
concerned whether or not our
youth are properly prepared to
handle this situation.
We have three aspects to the
solution of this problem: I.
Awareness, educa tion , an d
prevention ; 2. Treatment and
rehabilitation ; 3. Law e n·
forcemenVcrimina l justice.
While there is a great dea l of
work in ma ny areas being done, I
believe that more can be done
and must be done. The purpose of

Friday · ~

Nt:"' York !7~~.: hry
•C ulliekson !i-81 !Ill
Cindnnati
11krcnri

Camt'K
7·1 01 at

• Pcrr: 7~1 111 1
PilL1l&gt;ur J;h 1Solomon
1f\aat 6-51 1111

l.u;

An~o:l'lc s

at

Atlanta

G-61

al

St .Louis

at

Hou.~ton

!Hoot on IIHil

..

Singing
HowGreat'fhouArt."
·· It was"announced
that seven members attended the District Training
meeting at Trinify Mthodist Church
in Pt. Pleasant on Sept. 14.
Attending the meeting were Mrs.
.Joyce Carson, Mrs. Matilda Noble,
)1rs. Mary Capehart, Mrs. Laura
~ohnson, Mrs. Wilma Blake, Mrs.
;t.aurene J..ewis, Misses Ruth and
·Elizabeth Mcintosh, Mrs. Sarah
'Spencer, Mrs. · Louise Robinsoq,
Mrs. Virginia Wilson, Mrs. Ramona
·Sydenstricker, Mrs. Catherine
Smith and Rev. and Mrs. Kenneth
Watkins. ·

S&lt;ln F'rH n d ~l'() tB luc Ml ttl San
• F'in•t•vid 6-01 111 1

-------------------------l

FAMILY
CLINIC
675-6971
PtilntPieaunt

'ros'J'MASTER' Send lldcl"""' tu Tho Da))y
S..tln&lt;l, Ill Court St., Pumeruy, Ohlo45789.
SUB8CR1PTION RATt:S

By Clrrlerer Mot« R•~

One- .... '' .. '' .. ''.' .... '' .. ..

~Munth

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

:oneYettr ... . .. . ............ . ... . .
•

SINGLE COPY
PRICES

1

Sunday September 27

.......... liCenl•l

· Appearln1·at 1,3,5,7 pm.

ztHJaeuoaAve.

New Hours Now in Effect
Monday-Friday, 9 am. to 10 p.m.
Saturday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
.Allergy &amp; Dermatology Patients by Appointment Only . ·
Monday- Friday 12 : 30 p.m. to4:30 p . m.
.
Sorry Closed Sunday
Will Accept Medicare, Medicaid, U. M.W.A .

Free Captain A.m erlca Button .
to each child.
'

1

I 9.138

2

11,130
12,520
13,912

J
4

rooms u nevenly?

e~============

- Is your house protected by adequate insu lation,

15.651
16,521
14, 782
or more _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 17,390

storm windows, or weather stripping to conserve
energy?
- /lre there other repairs required to the existing
-.tructure that would improve the appearance or
mnke your home more livable?

If your answer is yes to any of the above questions and you fall within the eligible
income limits, you may qualify for a grant for home repair .

DO IT NOWI FUNDS ARE LIMITED
Rehabilitation funds of SI67,DOO for fiscal year 1981 are being made available by
th e Department of Housing and Urban Development.

I

The roof cr ew is continuing .
They presently are on the
Rutland Elementary School and
hopefully will complete that ·
building by September 25.
If I can be of anv assista nce to
you, please feel free to contact
me at 992·2153.

'

0-32

SUNDAY ONL Yl
OVER JO,OOO PAIRS

·--CMI

t''''"'" '

· · "'' ''"''"''"' ' '"" ~

. udW•IVirPdo

.... .

, .·., •..•• . , , , , , , , • I , , , , , , •

---------------------------------------------Village of Middleport Application for Housing Re habilitation
NAME____________________________________

Drapery t:1
Bedspread

AGE._____:INCOME,_ _ _ _ _ _ _~SOURCE OF INCOME._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

truckloads Of Draperies,
Bedspreads, Custom-Pleated
Sheers, Super-Wide Panels,
Kitchen Curtains.
'All Merchandise Must Be Sold At ·
Mill Wholesale Prices
Save Up To 70% Below Retail On
. ht Quality • Factory Closeouts And
. · Factory 'lrregutars.

'c ,

•Macfe In 'A'merica ·' · ·
•Brand Names
•· •AU Sizes, &amp; Colors
Direct From . ·
Jactory To You.
'

'

.

. ;oate: SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 27TH
' Time: 10 A.M. TO 5 P.M. r'

..;,,

I ·

. ;r. . . ,

. .· POifn PLEAUrtT NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY; ·
.
'62 North·
· Point PI-.~,. _W. Va.
•FREE PARKING
·. ..
11'' •OPEN
. TO PUBLIC
'

I

WHAT TYPE OF DWELLING DO YOU OWN? CHECK ONE:

NO. IN FAMILY

RENTAL UNIT._ _ _ __

ARE YOU HANDICAPPED?

IF SO, HOW?~---------------------

ARE YOU A FEMALE HEAD OF HOUSEHOLD?_______________________
WHAT IS THE CONDITION OF YOUR HOME NOW?. __________________
WHAT TYPE OF IMPROVEMENTS DO YOU NEED?___________________

SALE

'

____________

~DATE.

DATE HOME OR RENTAL UNIT WAS PURCHASED?____________________

GIGANTIC

l*leudW..tV!ipllo •

·.......
"........
·............ ·
.......

0

HOME

.

' The two areas within the Village that have
been designated by HUD as eligible lor
owners and renters to receive home
rehabilitation grants are the southwest por·
lion of the village between locust Street
and the river and the northern part of the
village bounded on th e east by No. Second
Ave., on the south by Hudson Street, on the
north by the corporation lin e and on the
west by the corporation lin e.

ADDRESS'- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -P,HONE NO. ______

PUBLIC NOTICE

MAlLS~ ·

II '~lif'.:lili ·

0

•

L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

r-

' i l '~

lloute,.. ,w en Huatl*-'••, :w.va. t

Income ltmits for vanous sized households are
snown below to determine progrr~m eligibility .
Number in Household
Income

an~a.

Permit No.

Present•

Di c~o

- Are your water erdr•in pipeslea~ing, plugged or''
corroded?
- Do you often blow fuses or ha ve you noticed
frayed wiring in the basement along ttle Hoor
jotsts?
- Are vour toundation walls bulging or leaning?
- Is your heating system old or does it heat your

Again, it is our opportWlity as
school a uthorities to provide the
educational climate for kids that
is both proper a nd safe. A major
crackdown in this area is being
instigated by me and will be
followed through. As a superin·
tendent of schools I ca nnot and
will not tolerate such actions in
our schools and I am asking you
for your help and support in this

•

&lt;U8P81-I
ADlvilloo ol Molllm&lt;dlo, b&lt;.

Ca~a.-·el\.CJiar

ill uh],. 4-4 1 111 1

Ask yourself the follow int questions:

au thorities.

The.' J&gt;~ily Sentinel

Montreal

~l

As a final note, you should
know that three expulsions from
school are now in the process for
possession of narcotics. Two of
these expulsions are at the junior
high and one at the high school.
The students involved will
receive the maximwn expulsion
from school by law if found guilty
at the hearings. They also will be
turned over to the proper law

2:00P.M.
POMEROY EAGLES
-2171
Thursday 7 ·.00
BINGO
pM

Tonight's games
Easter n at Frontier
Kyger Creek at Minford
North Galli a at M il lersbur g, Ky .
Wahama at Southern
Buffalo at Southwestern
Hannan Tra ce - Open
Pt . Pleasa nt - Open
Ga llipoli s at Ironton
Loga n at Wa ver ly
Me igs at Athens
Wellst on at Jackson
Sou th Point at Rock Hill
Wheelersburg at Coa l Grove

this article today is to say very
simply to all of you that there is a
chemical a buse problem in our
schools and in the Meigs Local
community and to say to you that
I am and will be working with
school officials and others to help
develop programs and in·
fonnation so that we might be
able to help this very serious
problem.
I ask all of you to help a nd to
cooperate. We need the
cooperation and help of parents,
law enforcement groups, churches and the clergy, school of.
ficials, the courts, and all other
interested groups.
The problem is here 1 Help us! I
will continue to work on this goal
and as more information
becomes available, I will keep
you infonned.

BINGO

NOW IN

HARDWAifE

By Supt. David L. Gleason
Have you heard about the new
program the Athletic Booster
Club has started thls year? It's
called the Meigs
200 &lt;llub. Menr
bers of this club
purchase tickets
of chance and can
win prize money
at each home
game. It is an ex·
cellent way to
support
the
athletics of both the jWlior and
senior highs at Mei gs Local. If
you would like to join, contact
any booster club member or the
principals at the two schools.

SUNDAY

•

FALL SALE

EBERSBACH

'Round Meigs Local

report.
~----------------------------------------~
The ammal 'Chri5tmas bazaar was
disCussed. It will be held Nov . 3 at
Cardinal's Grocery, Middleport,
fonn 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.; and Nov. 4 at
Kroger's, Pomeroy, from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m . lt .was decided to make candy
the last week of Oct~ber.
Vil'!linia Oiler closed with prayer.
. .The evening ended with a work
: 8ession for the bazaar and
: .ments were served.
'

·- --

TilE WINNERS - Trnlner William Smythe and driver Glen Garnsey
pose with Little Brown Jug winner Fan Hanover In the winner's circle
Thursday In Delaware, Ohio. The Canadian horse was lbe first fWy to win .
the event, part of pacing's Triple Cro'WJL (AP Laserphoto).

A ttentlon Middleport Residents

Willing
Workers

not made

public.
Wagner compla ined they included
pay for everything but suicide.
Teal sa id the new list of con·
cessions from those guarantees lists
24 items that would exempt the Reds
from paying Concepcion's salary.
They included fencing, organized
competitive polo and bobsledding.
Wagne r apparently wanted no
part of it.
" Even so, they're not enough to
make the thing palatable. We had
one whole page of things that Kapstein said he wouldn't have anythmg
to do with," Wagner said .
In the meantime, the Reds said all
four members of the Reds coachmg
staff have been rehired for next
season. Manager John McNamara
already had been signed to h1s fourth
on~year contract.
The coaches are Harry DWllop,
Bill Fischer, Russ Nixon a nd Ron
Plaza. All got one-year contracts.
Ted Kluszewski signed for another
year as batting instructor.

Win could give Bobcats MAC lead
Brian Burke may be working a
mini-miracle as football coach at
Ohio University , which can become
the sole Mid-American Conference
leader Saturday with a victory of in·
vading Ball State.
Before Burke a rrived two seasons
ago, the Bobcats had posted just two
winning seasons in their past nine
years. They owned a combined 16
victories in the four pre-Burke cam·

A laughing Archie McNeill, the
driver of first division pre-race
favorite Landslide, watched the
backstretch fracas.
" I don't know who started it, but
they got into it pretty good," he said.
"They were swinging a lot, but not
· landing any punches." ·
Later, in the paddock, Cheryl
Harris, wife of a Seabawk Hanover

County groups hold meetings

tbday.

punch at me.''

SEASONS

The guarantees proposed by both
were

..

NOWTHRU
THURSDAY , OCT. 8

"r~' 1

have an economic value. "
however,

Marohn, meanwhlle, said Webster
threw punches at him while he was
lying on the ground in the backstretch.
"I was rolling over, trying to catch
my horse," Marolm said. "Then he
(Webster) comes over a nd takes a

c:tj .ilJJ).tci

we are talking about things that

sides,

heats."

BILL
MURRAY

Proposals continue
in Concepcion deal
CINCINNATI fAPI - Although
both sides say they've ma de their
final offers, proposals continue in
the contract negotiations of Cin·
cinnati Reds shortstop Dave Con·

stick and Freedom Fella, went off
stride in the backstretch and were
pulled up.
" I thought I was going to be in the
accident," Webster said. "I had to
slide my sulky out to miss getting involved. I wanted to get it over
because I thought it would be too
tough for Fan Hanover to go three

•

"
not fi.ilish the raceoff, except the of...
fending horse. The judges ruled thai. :
Wildwood Jeb was the offender afldA
prohibited hJm from sharing in ~
fifth-place money of$3,650.
...

!!~~~~~~be!r~~!!~--------------------------------------~P~o~m~e~r~o!y::M~id~d~~p~o~r~t,~O:h~i:o~---------------------------------------T-h_e_o__a_il~y~S~e~n-ti_n_e_I~P-a~g~e--5~

ARE YOU RELATED TO ANY OFFICIAL, EMPLOYEE, OR AGENT OF THE VILLAGE
GOVERNMENT WHO IS IN A DECISION-MAKING POSITION IN CONNECTION WITH THE
CD PROGRAM?__________
IF YOUR HOME IS SELECTED FOR REHABILitATION, CAN YOU PROVIDE PROOF OF
INCOME?_ _ _ ___

I
SIGNATURE OF APPLICANT

---------------------------------------------Fill out the above application and return by mail or return in person to Village of
Middleport, Office of Community Development, 237 Race St., Mid!lleport, Ohio
before Oct. 9, 1981 or stop in at the office and the CD staff will assisf you in filling
out the application and answer any questions you may have about the program .

Applications must be received by Oct. 9, 1981 to be considered in the
first round of grants.

I

,.

.
'

'

�PagE&gt;-6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

HomemakerJ.-.-_ _ _ _ __ Forest Run
By AlMA MARSHALL
CUFTON - The Mason Ex·
tensiOn Homemakers, at their
meetmg on Sept. 15, made additional
plans for a Bazaar and Bake Sale
scheduled for Sept. 25 and 26 starting
at 9 a.m. a t the home of Mrs. Landon
Smith on Second St., Masoq. The
pres ident , Mrs. Snulh, announced
that th e Fall Conference at
Jackson's Mill will be held on Sept.
2'.1-0ct. 1.
Mrs. Lester Johnson and Mrs. Dan
Sydcnstncker were hostesses at the
noon luncheon whtch was held a t the
home of Mrs. Johnson at Chiton
At the opemng of the a ft ernoon
meet111g the group repeated the
Pledge of Alleg iance to the flag.
Mrs
Lester 1Laura I Johnson,
de vo tiO nal leader, read " I Prayed
For You Today " Scrtptu re read by
the leader tncluded Colossians I : 1-17
and dosed "' th the thought for the
da r, · If you arc too busy to pray for
others. you arc too busy .·
The treasurer's e port was g1ven
bJ Mrs . Jo;-ce Carson, a nd secretary
Mrs Clara Wrlltarns reported
Seve ral meetmgs for homemakers
arc sched uled st arling 111 October;
on thP 6th. Mrs Laurene Lewis and
Mrs I .ester J ohnson a re to attend a

wurkshup to as.s1st m making favors
for Achtcvernent Day scheduled for
Oct 22 ,,t the Scottish Inn near Pl.
P ll'asant
Club cormm ttee cha irpersons are

requc;-;tl•d tu a tl ~ nd a meetmg on
Oct 12 at IU a .m at the Courthouse
.1\niH' X.

Mrs . Lou Carpenter, an Extension
Homemaker Club member, was
remembered in Silent Prayer. She IS
a patient at Charleston Memorial
Hospital, Charleston, W.Va.
The president announced that
$302.25 profit was realized fro the
Homemakers Council Fa1r Booth at
Mason County Fair.
Mrs. Cecil Smith 1s to attend the
lesson training meeting on Oct. 23 at
the Courthouse Annex .
Mrs Gloria Chapman presented
the lesson on " Jamaica." She sa1d m
part J amatca rs the third largest of
the islands in the West Indies . This
Chrtst1an country ga med 1ls Illdependence from Brita in 111 1962.
The temperatures ranges from 80 to
90 degrees along the coast and lower
in the mountamous areas. The main
export is suga r and most 1rnportan t

mmera l is baux1te
Yo ung people 16 years of age are

Friday, september 25, 198\
a
friends. A trip will be decided fl!r

Middleport, Ohio

A special offering for district
projects to be turned in a I the Oct. 6
meeting 111 Gallipolis was taken
when the Forest Run United
Methodist Women met recently at
the home of Mrs. Kathleen Scott
wtth Mrs Mary K Roush as the
assistmg hostess.

II was noted tha t anyone in the
church may dona te to the special of·
fering . The UMW voted to continue
the pledge the same as last year.
S1xty-three sick visits were repor·
ted. Mrs. Mary Roush pres1ded at
the busmess meetmg.

Reedsville
By MRS. L. BALDERSON
Reedsville U.M.W. met in the

the group, Mrs. Horner and Shirley
Bowman.
Twenty-seven shut-in calls were
made. Severjll calls were si~ned for

'

November at the ned meetlpg. DQQr
Pfize was awarded to Mrs. Leona
Ruth , also prizes to Mrs. Cowdery
and Mrs. Mamie Buckley.

ch urch basement with Mrs. Dolly
Reed as hostess. Meeting opened
with the Lord's Prayer in unison and
scripture reading by Mrs. Reed.
Mrs. Sandy Cowdery led the
devotions using the topic " Our Ught
to Shine for God." This was followed
with a candlelight service on God's
Love. Program closed with prayer
b~ Mrs. Judy Homer.
The group voted to pay the rrussion
pledge a nd a lso g1ve a dona tion to
the Cathy Spencer Kidney fund . A
plaque IS to be g1ven to the church 111
memory of Mrs. May Humphrey.
Two new members were added to

CHECK US FOR YOUR
CHURCH NEEDS
Sunday School literature
Youth Group Stories
Attendance Pins
Class Awards and Gifts
Communion Ware
Hymnals,
Choir Music
Bibles and
Office Supplies
Reference Books

irt~~lt
arutQuatfu

99 MILL ST.

Prescription s

~~-- ~

J)

get-acquamted

1111-:hl; Tuesday as men's mg ht ;
Wn hwsday as lad1es' mght;
Thu rsuaJ as youth mght a nd
Fmla y as old-fashiOned mght.
The pu blic IS invtted to atte nd .
EMil E RIDGE· Cornmumty
Church homecommg Sunday.
lllurnm~ serv 1ce at 10, basket dinner a t 12.30 p.m. Afternoon
pr\Jgram f ea lunn g " T he
Messe ngers" of Wellston . P ubhc
IIIVtted by Carl Hicks, pastor.
REVIVA L SERVICES wrll be
hel d at the J oppa Ch urch a t 7. 30
ea d 1 cvemng beginmng Sunday
evenmg and continumg through
Oct 3. The Gospel Rays will sing
nn Oct 2 and the Thomas family
wil l s mg on Oct. 3. Seldon Johnson 1s pastor and the public is invtted to attend.
REVIVAL IN PROGRESS at
the Church of J esus Christ, New
Luna Road, 7: 30 eac h mghl.
EvangeliSt Robert Ha ll P astor
Lloyd Hoffman inv1tes the public .

~ccds -

B1r d Seeds - Oy sl er Sh ells &lt;t nd Grrt Fer t1l 1ze r s - L1m e - Ce·
m ent a nd Mor t ar Sto c" Sa lt Wa fer So ftener Re m edi eS Sa lT- L1tfe r s
V.lCCi nc Ro011n g Pa 1nts Red Brand Fenc1ng - Ba ler a nd B.nder
Tw1ne · Spra ys - Gates - Hay · Straw

The

Mulberry

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Auto, PB. PS, sli d ing bac k W1nd ow . new f1r es, &lt;19,000

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1975 FORD MAVERICK ...·.................... 51395
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992 · 6655

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

GrocenesGeneral M erch.1nd1 se
Rac1ne 949-2550

UN!TED PRESBYTERIAN M!N !STRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY, Rev Wando Johnson,
director: Harold Johnson. director of
educatton.
seNice , 10:30 a .m. Choir rahecnol ,
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTER!AN . Wor·
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m . under direction of
ship Service , 9 a .m .: Church SchooL
Alice Nease.
10:30a. m .
POMEROY
CH\JRCH
OF
THE
M!OOLEPORT. Church School . 9·00
NAZARENE: Corner Union and Mulberry .
a.m ., Morning worship , 10: 15.
Rev. Clyde V . Henderson , pastor. Sun·
SYRACUSE
FIRST
UN!TED
day ochoo t, 9:30 a .m ., Glen McClung,
PRESBYTERIAN Church. Church School,
supt. ; morning wort hip, 10:30 a.m. ,
10:15a.m .; Worsh1p, ll :30o.m .
evening service, 7.30: mid-week ser RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD , Randall
vic•. Wednesday , 7:30p.m.
Boiley, pastor. Sunday school. 10om ..
GRACf EPISCOPAl CHURCH - 326 E
Sunday worship, 11 a .m .. Children's
Main St ., Pomeroy . Sundo)' services at
church, 11 a.m.; Sunday evening ser10:30 a .m. Holy Communion on the flrsf
vice. 7 .30 p.m. : Wednesday evening
Sunday of each month , and combined
young ladies oux11iory , 6 p.m . Wednes
with morning prayer on the third Svn day family wors~ip , 7:00p .m .
day. Morning prayer and sermon on oil
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH , Neo'
other Sundays of the month , Ch~o~rch
long Bottom, Edsel Hart , pastor. Sunday
School and nursery care provided. Cof schodl , 10 o.m , Chu rc h, 7·30 p.m .,
fee hour in the Parish Hall Immediately
prayer meeting, 7:30p.m . Thursday.
foUOwlng the service.
MIOOLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Third
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W
Ave ., the Rev . William Knittel. pastor.
Main St. Neil Proudfoot, pasto,, Bible
Carl Nottingham, Sunday School Supt.
school. 9:30 a .m.; morning Worship ,
Sunday school, 10 a .m Classes for all
10:30 a.m. ; Youth meetings , 6:10p.m. ,
ages; evening service 7 30: Bible study,
evening worship, 7:30. Wednesday night
Wednesday , 7:30 p.m .; youth serv ices,
prayer meeting and Bible st~. 7:30
Friday, 7:30p.m.
p.m .
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTrST. Cor·
THE SAfvATION ARMY , Ill Bullernul
ner Ash and Plum ; Rolph Butcher,
Ave., Pomeroy . Envoy and
Ray Win pastor. Saturday evening service, 7 ·30
ing , offkers in charge. SunclJy-holiness
p .m .: Sunday School. 10 a.m . Sunday
.....,ling, 10 a .m .: Sunday School, 10.30
Worship Service, 11 a .m .; Bible Study
a.m. Sunday school leader#, PSM . Eloise
Wed., 7.30 p.m., Noel Herrmann.
Adams. 7:30 p .m., solvat
meeting,
t&amp;acher.
various speakers and m \c specials.
ME!GS
ThundaY-10 a .m . to :2 p.m. Ladles
COOPERATIIIE PARISH
Home League, all wome~ Invited; 7:30
METHODIST CH\JRCH
p .il). prdyer meeting a~' Bible study.
Rev. Robert McGee , interim d irector
ReV. NMI Herman , teach .
POMEROY CLUSTER
BURLINGTON SOUT RN BAPTIST
Rev. Robert McGee
CHAPEL, ~auto 1. Shode.·Bible school. 7
POMEROY, Sunday School 9· 15 a.m
p .m . Thurtday: worship~ ervlce , 8 p.m.
Worship service 10:30 a.m . Choir
POMEROY WESTSIO
CHURCH OF
rehearsal, Wednesday, 7 p.m . Rev.
CHRIST, 200W. Main St. 992-5235. Vocal
Robert McGee, pos tor.
music. Sunday worship , 10 a .m .; Bible
ENTERPRISE. Worship 9 a .m. Church
study, 11 a.m.; wor~hip1 6 p.m . Wednes·
School 10 a.m . Richard Rothemick,
day Bible study. 7 p.m .
pastor .
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
ROCK SPRINGS , Sunday School 9 15 o.
CHURCH, Rev.Ralph S..lth. pastor . Sun·
m . Worsh ip serv1ce, 10 o . m ., Richard
doy school, 9:30 o 1m. , Mrs . Worley
Rathemi ch, pastor
Fra"cls, IUperlntendent. Preaching sar.
FLATWOODS, Church School 10 a .m .
vic" first &amp; third Sundays following Sun·
Worship 11 a.m ., Richard Rothemlck,
day School,
po! for .
GRAHAM UNilfD
METHODIST ,
M!DDLEPORT CLUSTER
Preochlng 9:30 a.m., lint and second
HEATH , Church School9:30 om. Wor·
Sundays of ooch mooth: third and fourth
ship 10:30 a.m . UMYF 6 p.m . Robert
Sundays each month, worship service at
Robinson , Pastor.
7 :30p.m. Wedn..cijy evenings at 7:30.
RUTLAND Church Sct!ool 9·30 a .m.
Proy•r and Blblo St..jly,
Worship 10:30 a.m . Robert Rider. pastor.
SEVENTH-DAY Al/IIENTIST, Mulberry
SALEM CENTER , Worship 9 a.m.
Heights Rood . Pomerof. Pastor, Albert
Church School 9·"5 a .m . Robert R1der,
Dittos: Sabbath ~I Suporrntondont.
pastor.
,
Rrto Whllo. Sabb&lt;ilh School, Saturday
PEARL CHAPEL , Sunday School 9 :30
afternoon at 2100. '\ vith Worship Service
a .m . Worship 7:30pm
following at 3: 1$.
SNOWVILLE. Sunday School. 9 :30a.m.
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHWarship 11 :00 a.m .
Sister Harrlett Worner. Supt . Sunday
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
School, 9:30 a .~. : morning worship ,
Rev . Stanley Merrlfied , Mini ster
10:•5 a.m.
FOREST RUN : Worshp 9 o.m . Church
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Oa•id
School lOa.m
Mann, minister: William Watson , Sunday
MINERSIIILLE , Church School 9 o .m.
school supt. Sunday schooL 9 :30 a.m ..
Worship 10a.m .
mOrning worship 10:30a.m.
ASBURY: Church School 9.50 a .m.
FIRST SOUTtiERN BAPTIST , 282
Worship 11 a.m. Bible Study 7 :30 p .m.
Mulberry Ave . , ~eroy , Rev. William
Thu rsday. UMW fist Tuesday .
R. Newman, pastor; Hershel McClure ,
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Sun:day school s.r.perlntendent. Sunday
Rev. James Clark
school , 9:30 a'T'.; mo.r nlng worship ,
Rev . Mark Flynn
10:30; IIN'enln$l) wonh1p, 7:30 p.m .
Rev . Florence Smith
Midwook proyof sorvlco, 7:30p.m.
Rev. Carl Hicks
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH , Oo• ·
BETHANY, (Dorcas) , Worship 9:00
ter Rd., Rd., / Longs•ltlo, Ro•. A . A .
a.m. Church School 10:00 a.m . Bible
Hughes, l'osto . Sunday School 10 a .m .
study, ht, 2nd , 3rd ond 5th Tuesdovs
Servlces .On Tursday, Thursday and Sun 7:15p.m .: youth fellowship , :2nd and •th
daY, 7:30p.m .
Tuosdayo, 6:00p.m .
'AITH TABERNAClE CH\JRCH, Bailey
CARMEL and SUnON (Worship , Sun·
Run Rood, Rev. Emmett Rawson, pastor.
day School and moat other events held
Handley Dunn , sur,•· Sunday ochool, 10
lolntly.) Sunday School9: ~5 and Worship
a.m. Sunday oven ng oorvlco 7:30: Blbto
11 :00 at Sutton first ond third Sundays
t-hing, 7:3!1 p.m. Thursday.
and at Carmel second and fourth SunMtOOlEI'OIIT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
days. Bible Study second, four1h and
CHRISTIAN UN tON. Lawrence Man loy,
ftfth Thursdays , 7:15p.m . Fomlly Nlghl
pastor; Mn1• Ru11ell Young. Sunday
Fellowship Dinner third Thursday , 6:30
SCiiool Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
p.m . . Everi!"'l W9fShlp, 7;30. Wodnosdoy
APPLE GRO\IE, Sunday School 9:30
pray~m.et]ng, 7:30J!".m .
a.m . Worship 7:30p .m . ht and 3rd Sun·
, MT. MOIIIAH c:tiiJRCH OF GOO,
days: PJ:ayer m"tlng Wednesday 7:30
Racine- tlo'l . Jomos •!iattorflold, pastor,
p.m. Fellowship SUpPer first Saturday 6
MOtnlng wonhip , 9';&lt;15 a.m.: Sunday
p.m . UMW2nd Tuosday 7:30p.m .
sctlool, ,JQ:&lt;IS a .m .: ovoning worship, 7,
EAST LETART, Chruch School 9 a .m .
Tue,doy. 1 :30 _ P,,m., !adios prayer
Worship eervice 10 a.m. Prayer meeting
-tlng; Wodntis4!&gt;Y, 7:30p.m. YPE.
7:30 p.m. Wodnosdoy . UMW second
MtO~EPORT ~IR$T ~I$T , Cam or
.
Sllilh ,and" Patmot, tho ROY, Mark Me· Tuooday 7:30p.m .
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday school
Clung. SUnday sChool, 9: 15a.m.: Randy
· ~. Sunday 1School, Mlporlnt.ndont •. 10 a.m.: worahip, 11 a .m . Choir proctke ,
,
D01iJ Rtgp, otot, supt. lllomlng Worship, Thur:sdqy, 8p.m ,
LETART FALL$- Wors~lp sorvi"" 9
IOiiS o .in . YOUth meeting, 7 :30- p.m.
Wodu~sday. indudlng tott, _ . . . a.m . Church SchooiiO a.m . ' •
MORNING STAR, Worship 9:30 a .m.;
'"''"" lunklr: astronauts, and ... nror Church
SChool10:30 a.m.
•and
h]th,IYF: choir pnocllce, 8:30
MORSE CHAPEL , Church School 9:30
p,ljl. Wodt oodaJ prayer meeting and II·
a.m . Worship 11 a.m.
bit'~• Wlodt udav, 7 :30p.m.
POIITlAND, Sunday School 6:30 p,m. ,
. , Ot\IICH 011 .OlltllT. l!'ltddl_., 5th
;GJid Meln, . _ Million. mtnltiter, Scott Evenlr\g Worohtp, 7:30 p.m . Youth
Followthip, W,.lnoodoy, 7 :30 p.m .
.~~· ~lat,• mi~loter. •iblo
NOIITHEAST CLUSTER
,!lciiOot, 9:30 o. m .. momt-. wonhlp,
·
Rov: ilichard W. Thotnao
' IDiiO a. 111. :~~ ..,.tco, '1:00 p.m .
Duono s-,donotrlck..-, 51.
~· II ~P~.;r.,f.""' and youth ..oilp
Shofdon Johnoon

OF

THE

lundjor

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paator:

...... 9:30 ......; _,.,. wotthlp.
OtiO

1SuiMI.ay

o.m. ;

evon.ltollc

ot-"'t. 1100 1p.m. ,....,., -lng,
r ' ........._. 1
'! n m , , ),
•

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'

.

Joht&gt; w' Oaullot

JO,PA, Wonhlp 9:00 a .m. Church
St'-llO:OOo.m .
'
CHUTIII. worship 9 a.m., Church
St'-1 10 a.m . Choir R-'-oal 7 p .m.,

Thuncloyo. Bible Study, Thu~o.

7:30p.m.

..

·

"

m

1t6 S. Second
Pomeroy
992 -3325

WAID CROSS
SONS SlORE

rt::~·~·rCNUICH

PRICES NIAY VAi4Y AT INOtVIOUAL STOMS ANO OEALI!M

,

I

'.

.·JIII
&lt;NAtA••·
11*1 :1tm - p i '
.Whlte,
.t-1
!lunda~ 1

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

ot Columbus, 0
804 W . Mc11n
992 2318 P omer oy

&amp; L OAn

Pom eroy

-lor

Mllstnoe
Included ,

Natronwrde Ins . Co.

F "' "' "' I ~ AI hen\ Counlv

Fmest '"
Modular Homes
1100 E. MiHn

M
,.

SUGAR RUN MILLS

~

Pomeroy

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

llamond Savings &amp;
loan Co.

!Timothy
115-20

'

12 1-11

Wednesda-

Thuo;day

"

n Pelef
1 1· 9

_'(!!.,.

Friday
RevetahOn
131 -10

K enny has these talks w1th God every day He knows
they are important
. to God as well as KE"nny

McCOY'S AUCTION SERVICE

Th1s1s a very spec1al m oment
about to have h1s talk W1th God

MonOay

James
t 1-8

Kenny·s day. He IS

Compl ete
1 ~T\..
Aufomot1ve
• .1
ser11 1ce
lfr' . .
L ocust &amp; Beech Str eet
991 -9q21 M1ddl eport

A Tallc With God

S.n&lt;lay

Saturday

Psalms
37 1-7

1n

fL

tt was J esu s who p01nted to a chlld·s humble faith as
an example for all Christians.

:nt%"'

" for A Real Auctton
Ca ll th e Rea l M cCO'r'"
1. o . "Mac" M cC oy
Rt I , Reedsvtll e, Oh .
985 J944

Have there been any very spec1al moments 1n you r
day latety? Have you though t about having a talk w1th
God?

LONG BOTIOM, Sundcy School ot q 30
a .m. Evening Worship at 7:30 p.m .
Thursday Bible Study , 7:30p .m .
REEDSVIllE Sunday School 9 30 am
Morning Worsh1p i O:JO a.m . Eventng
Worshp 7:30 p. m
Bibl e Sl ud y
Wednesdays of 7·30 p .m .
ALFRED , Sunday School at 9:-45 a.m.
Morning Worsh1p at II a.m . Youth 6 30
p m Sundays . Wednesday Night Pray er
Meetmg , 7.30 p m .
ST PAUL, (Tuppers Plain s) · Sunday
Sc hool 9 :00 a .m . Morn ing Wo rs hip at
10 00 o .m B1ble Study, 7:30 p.m . Tues day .
SOUTH BETHEL (SII\Ier Ridge): Sunday
School 9:00 a m. Morning Woshlp 10.00
om Wednesday Bible Study, 7 .30 p.m .
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST , Oliver
Swain , Superinflmdent Sunday school
9.30 8\lery week .
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION. Rev.
Keith Eblin pastor Sunday School 9 30
am .: Leonard Gilmore. first el der;
even1ng service , 7:30 p.m . Wednesday
prayer meeting , 7:30pm
BEARWALLOW R!DGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST , Duane Worden , minister B1ble
class. 9 30 a.m .; morning worship . 10 30
am ., eventng worsh1p , 6 ·30 p m .
Wednesday Bible study , 6:30 p.m
NEW STIVERSIIILLE COMMUNITY
Church , Sunday Schoo\ seNice , 9 45
a . m .;
Worsh i p
se rvice ,
10 ·30 .
Evangelistic Service. 7:30p.m . Wednes day , Prayer meet 1ng , 7:30.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy Harrisonville Rd .: Robert Purtell pastor ;
B1ll M cElroy , Sunday school supt . Sunday
school , 9 30om., morning worship and
communion , 10:30 a .m.; Sunday worship
service , 7 p.m . Wednesday evening
prayer meeting and Bible study , 7 p.m.
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, P1ne
Grove . The Re11 . Will iam Middlesworth ,
Pastor . Church services 9:30 a.m . Sun day Schoo\ 10·30 a .m.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST , Jerry
Pingley, pastor. Sunday school . 9 30
a .m ., morn 1ng worship , 10 30 a .m ..
Wednesday evening service. 7 30
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev . Earl Shuler.
pastor. Sunday schooi9:JO a.m.: Church
service , 7 p m .. youth m eeting . 6
p.m. Tuesday Bible Study, 7 p .m .
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE ,
Rev John A . Coffman pastor. Martha
Wolfe , Chairman of the Boord of Christian Life. Sunday School , 9:30 o .m : mor ning worship. 10:30. Sunday evenmg
worship, 7:30 p.m . Prayer meeting,
Wednesday , 7:30p.m
RACINE fiRST BAPTIST. Don L Walker .
Pastor, Robert Smith , Sunday school
supt. ; Sunday school 9 30a m , mormng
worship, 10:.. 0 a.m .; Sunday evening
worsh1p , 7:30; Wodne1doy evening Bibl e
study . 7·30.
OAN IIILLE WESLEYAN, Rev R D.
Brown, pa stor. Sunday Sct!ool 9:30
a .m .; morning worship 10:45; youth ser·
vice , 6 :45 p .m .; evening worship , 7:30
p .m .; prayer and prai se, Wedn asd(Jy ,
7:30p.m .
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST, Rov. Morvin Markin , poster; Steve Little Sunday
school supt. Sunday school. 10 am .;
morning worship, II a.m . Sunday even·
!ng worshlp,_?.30., Pro'[&amp;~ meeting and

Copyo"''" rnr •.,,,.., A~,..,.....,l1 s.,....,.
PO l'm1 110~ 4 C/lal'hlt•o"'ll!o V~9•n.• ?lli(l';

Bible study , lhu rsCioy, t ·JO p .m .. youth
service , 6 p m. Sunday .
CHR!STrAN FELLOWSH!P CHURCH . 363
N. 2nd A\le , Middleport .Sundoy School.
10 00 o. m Sun . ' Tues. Evening Services
7.30 p .m Frtdoy Prayer M eeting 7 30
p m.
LIBERTY Chri stian Church . .-4 liberty
Ave Pomeroy . Sunday School 10 a .m.;
Worship 7 30 Wednesday Ser~o~ice . 7 30
p .m .
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD , Rev . R. E
Robinson , pas tor Sunday school. 9 30
o .m ; worship serv 1ce, 11 a .m .. evenmg
service, 7·00; youth service, Wednes day . 7 ClOp m .
LANGSV!LLE CHR!STIAN CHURCH,
Robert E Mus ser , pastor Sunday school
9 30 a.m .. Paul Musser. supt.; morning
worsh 1p , 10 30, Sunday evenmg serv1ce,
7 00, mid - week serv1ce, Wednesday , 7
p.m
SYRACUSE
CHUR CH
OF
THE
NAZARENE. Rev James B Kittle . pastor .
Norman Presley , Sunday Sc hool
Superintendent Sunday school 9 30
o .m . mornmg worship . 10:45 om .:
evangeli stt c service , 7 p m Pray er and
Prolse Wednesday , 7 p m . youth
mee ting . 7 p m
EDEN UN !TED BRETHREN IN CHR!ST .
Elden R Bloke , pastor . Sunday School1 0
om .. Robert Reed. supt . ~ Morn1ng serm on, 1I a .m .. Sunday night services
Chrislion Endeovcr. 7.30 p .m , Song ser vice, 8 p.m .; Preockmg 8:30 p m
M1dweek Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7
p m ., Al vin Reed , lay leader.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST, Localed 01
Rutland on Ne w limo Rood , next to
Forest A cre Pork Rev . Roy Rouse,
pastor; Robert Mu sser , Sunday Schoo l
supt. Sunday sct!ool. 10 30 a m .. worship
7 30 p.m .Bible Study , Wednesday , 7.30
p m ., Saturday n1ght prayer serv1ce , 7 30
p. m
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRIST!AN , Roger
Watson , pa stor ; M1ldred Ziegler, Sunday
sct!ool sup!. Morning worsh ip, 9 30 o.m
Sunday school , 10:30 a .m . : evenm g ser VICe, 7:30.
MT . UNION BAPTI ST. Rev. Tom
Dooley ; Joe Sayre, Sunday Sckoo \
Superintenent
Sunday school, 9 -45
c.m .. evening worship , 7:30 p m . Prayer
meet1ng , 7:30p.m . Wednesdoy
TUPPERS PLA!NS CHURCH OF CHR!ST
Vincent C. Waters, Ill , mini ster ; He rmon
Block, supenntendent . Sunday School
9:30 am., evening service 7 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study, 7 p .m
CHESTER CHURCH Of THE NAZARENE .
Rev. Herbert Grote . pa stor . Fron k Riffle ,
supt. Sunday School. 9:30 am . Worship
serv1ce, 11 a .m . and 7.30 p.m Prayer
meeting , Wednesday . 7:30p .m .
LAUR EL CUFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH . Rev. Fl oyd F Shook , poster .
Ll oyd W ri ght, Director of Chnstian
Education. Sunday School. 9 30 a m .
Morning Won hip , 10:30 a m ., Choir
Practice, Sunday , 6:30 p.m .; E~o~enmg
Worship, 7:30 p .m Wednesday Prayer
and Bible Study , 7:30 p.m .
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHR!ST, Chodes
Russell, Sr . , min iste r , Rick Mccomber,
supt. Sunday school . 9 :30a.m .: worship
service, 10:30a .m . Bible Study , Tue sday ,
7:30 pm

Group elects officers
New officers were elected af the r ecent m eeting of Alfred United
Methodis t Wom en held at the church .
They are Nellie Parker , president; Florence Ann Spencer, v ice
president ; Janet Moore, secreta ry; Janice Pullins. treasure r; and
Thelma Henderson, missions. Reporting the slate of officers was the
nominating committee, Osle Mae Follrod, Florence Ann Spencer, and
Annie Thompson,
The UMW voted to raise the pledge for the district missionary
work by 10 percent . Janice Pullins reported 1he decisions of the soup
supper committee. Tentative date is Nov. 21 with serving to start at 5
p . m . Soups wilt be bean, vegetable , potato and chili. Other foods will
hot dogs, sloppy ]oes, corn bread, p ie, cake and beverages.
Gertrude RObinson volunteered to check w ith Kimes Convalescent
1
..
wilt tie sent to her and a friendship card will be sent to Helen Woode.
Mrs . Henderson and Nina Robinson reported on a Day on th e
District which they attended. M ission is where a need Is was em·
phaslzed with special thought given to local churches and to family
ltle.
Fiorente AnrfSpencer ted the pledge program, "A Gilt of Love Two Copper Coins." She'/ald tribute to the charter members and their
work. tsota Taylor, an Mrs. Robinson. the two charter members
pre!@nt, told of the work of the society In building tile church and con·
'
· trlbutlng to the mission outreach.
]!tefreshments of Ice cream and cake were served bV Mrs. Robin·
!ion and Mrs. Par~er . Others present were Clara Foltrod, June Stear·
ns. and Ruth Brooks. Next meeting wit I be at the home of Thelma Hen·
deuon, Oct. 30. The program wltl be "Sing T hankfully to God ."

. be

~.':::'nerl.~t~~~s~~=·P~;:Jrs' ~~~~~~·r":~i.;~·~~~;:,&gt;r;..~i~t'::: ~r~~i~

Sa l es a no
Serv 1ce

mE DAILY
SENTINEL
Mtdd l('pOrl
Pnme r ov 0

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t•i

SYRA CUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
Not Pentecos tal Rev Georgs Oiler.
pastor Wor ship serv1ce Su nday 9 45
am , Sunday school , 11 a .m ., wors h 1p
service. 7 30 p m Thu rsday prayer
meeti ng. 7 30 p m

MT HERMON Untied Brethren 1n
L- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' Christ
Church Rev Robert Sanders

learn how important a talk with God is to you Both
Make prayer a vital part ol every day
Kenny has!

Equipment

Ru tla nd, Oh 10 4S77S
J Wm . " Bill" B row n , Ow ner
P hone (6141 742 1777

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

Tuesday
Hebo'ews

MILLING DIVISION

THE

as

KingsbuiJ Home Sales
&amp;Service ~ · :

10 35-39

@nation @mpany

Phone 992 ·6304
126 E Mam

46 1 S Th1rd, M1ddl e pon
q92 · 2 19 6

Hebrews

Optlmus®-10 by Realistic

SION .2nd
Middleport
992 -3451

Pameroy

992-2955

Bakers tf
Good Bread

SEE YOUfl OULU NOW'

I

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

214 E. Mam
992-5110 Pome roy

Half-Price Sale!
Deluxe Hi-Fi Speaker

Eat ln or
Our

Co:~rrv

s

~~~~!

Services

HARRISOI\Vli .LE E le mentary School wtll s ponsor a garden
tractor pull Saturd ay. Sept 26
We1gh-m 1.s at 5 p m . with ~ve nUs
to begm at 7 p.m. Proceeds w1ll
go to tltc PTO for the youth
program For additiOnal Ill·
fon na twn cal l 992-5449 or 992·

Sunday

282W . M.:un

Reuter-Brogan Insurance

Saturday

.

1

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

TRINITY CHURCH. Rev. W. H. Perrin,
pastor, Debbie Buck , Sunday school
supt. Church School , 9:15a.m .; worship

H55

The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.
FRENCH'S SUNOCO
PIZZA SHACK
SERVICE CENTERS

John F . Fultz, Mgr .
Ph . 992-2101
Pomeroy

SEED AND MILLING
HEADQUARTERS

Social
Calendar

de.s1g nalPd

u

St. Rt.

Pt Pleasant.

ORANGE TOWNSHIP
Volun teer Fire Department will
huld ib an nual ch1cken barbecue
' rmn or shmel Sunda y, Sept. 27
bL'glnnlng CJt II a m The menu
cull!li!&gt;lS uf ha iC &lt;:1 clm.:ken, ba ked
bc&lt; nl ~. cole slaw . bread and
bt&gt;vc ra~ e fm $3 50 Dmncrs ma y
l&gt;&lt;.' ea!t'n at the locatiOn or ta ken
uut. Homemade Ice c ream will
also be sold . There w1ll be a stock
cl!ld mn(_llfl p(i clla 1n saw contest
at 2 p m. The public 1s mv1ted to
attend
H.EV IVAL SE RVI CES will
beg m Sun da~ at the Bra dford
Church of Chn st and continue
through Ort. 2. Serv1ces w1ll be
held at 7 p rn each eve ning by
Eva ngeliSt H.ay Russell . Kathryn
Russe ll will be the song lea der .
Monday ni g ht has been

and Church Directory
INC. "' MEIGS TIRE
\ : CENTER, INC.
8\\"(i

Pom*GJ

MIDDLEPORT BOOKSTORE

..

RIENCE 111E JOY Of RELIGION cE

r----''----'-'-----------...:..----

D€votiom; were give n by Mrs.
Naonu Wyatt with Mrs. Betty Black· . - - -- - - - - - - - -wood, program leader, using as her
topic, "Deciswns." Decisions of
characters of the Bible were read by
Carolyn Sa lser, Ann Watson, and
Leah Nease. Mrs. Blackwood sang
··He Leadeth Me," and then was
Flower Shop
JOmed by Mrs. An n Watson, Mrs.
Edith Sisson, and Mrs Ma rybelle
r hew ·lV A m enc.1
~e nd 'i l ove''
Warner for " Ivory Palaces." The
Y'n :ZlJJY or 9Y1 571 1
specia l was by Mrs Erma Rous h
who asked the group to sing "' In the
Garden."

able to vote, a nd the children sta rt to
school a t the age of four .
After the topic discu&gt;Sion, Mrs.
Chapman conducted a self-test qu1z
on Jarn a1ca
Attending the rneetmg were Mrs.
Matilda Noble, Mrs Sarah Spencer,
Mrs. Cathenne Smith, Mt·s. Hazel
Srn1th. Mrs. Laurene Lewis, Mrs.
Ken neth 1Olive I Watkins, Mrs
Alma Marsha ll, Mrs
Clora
A dessert course was se rved by
Wilh ams, Mrs. J oyce Carsun, Mrs
the hostesses to IG members and
Glona Chapman and hostesses, Mrs
guests , Mrs. Warner and Sandy
,Johnson a nd Mrs. Sydenstncker
llarmlton
--------------------------------

ldd

REORGAN!ZED CHURCH OF JE SUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SA INTS
Portland Roc1 ne Rood Wilham Rou sh,
poster Phylli s Stobort , Sunday School
Suj:: t Sunday School. 9 30 am . M orn ing
worship , 10:30 a .m .: Sunday even1ng
service 7 p m Wednesday evening
prayer services , 7 30 p .m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST , Rev Ear\ Shuler ,
pastor Worship serv1ce. 9·30 o m Sunday school. 10·30 o.m Bible Study end
prayer servtce Thu rs day , 7 30 p.m.
CARlET ON CHUR CH, Kmgsbury Rood
Gory King , pastor. Sunday school , 9:30
o.m ., Rolph Carl. supennlendent, aven mg worship , 7 30 p .m . Prayer meeting .
Wednesday, 7 30 p. m.
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN , Tom
Richeson . pa stor, Wallace Damewood ,
Sunday School Superintendent. Worsk1p
service at 9 a m Bible Schooll O c.m
HYSEll RUN HOUNESS CHURCH Rev
Th eron Du rham pastor Sunday School
at 9 30 a .m .. Mornmg worship ot 10.30
a m. Thursday serv 1ces at 7· 30 p m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ot Bal d
Knob . loca ted an County Road 31 Rev.
Lawrence Gluesencamp, pastor . Rev.
Roger Wlllfooss 1slont pastor Pre achmg
serv1ces . Sunday 7:30 p.m . pray er
meetmg, Wedn esday , 7 30 p m , Gory
Griffitt'l. leadeYouth groups , Sunday
eveing, 6:30p.m. w1th Roger and Vio let
W1l lford as leaders . Communion ser vices fi rst Sunday each month
WH ITE 'S CHAPEL , Coolville RD. Re11 .
Roy Deeter , pastor Sunday school 9:30
om . worst'lip serv 1ce. 10.30 a .m . Bibl e
study and prayer serviCe, Wednesday ,
7 30p .m
RUTLAND CHURCH Of CHR! ST Bob
Buckmgham, poslor Herb Elliott , Sunday school sup t. Sunday school, 9 30
am .. morn ing wo rsh1p and comu nion .
10 30 a.m .
RUTLAN D BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH.
Amos Til\t s, pa stor; Danny T1ll1s , Sunday
School Supt Sunday School , 9 30 o m ;
followed by morning worsh ip Sunday
eventng servt ce , 7·00 p.m . Prayer
meeting. Wednesday 7 00 p.m
RUTLAND
CHUR CH Of
THE
NAZARENE . Rev. lloyd D. Gnmm , Jr ,
post er Sunda y sct!ool . 9 30om .. wor ship service , 10:30 a.m. Broadcast li ve
over WMPO, young people's service. 7
p m Evangeli st iC service , 7 30 p m
Wednesday serviCe , 7:30pm
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. Corne r of
Second and APostor Frank Lowther Sun day school, 9·45 o m .; worship serv1 ce.
11 a m and ·7 30 p m . Weekly Bibl e
Study , Wednesday , 7:30pm .
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST , Miller
St , Mason W Va . Eugene L Conger .
minister. Sunday Bible Study 10 a m ,
Worship 11 a.m. ond 7 p.m Wednesday
B1ble Study , vocal music . 7 p.m .
UFE SC!ENCE CHURCH 12 North
Th1rd St. , Che shire Independ ent , fun ·
domental services . Sunday evening 7:30
p .m Pa stor Rev . Or. Robert Persons .
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dudding
Lane . Mason , W. Vo. Rev. Ronn1e B.
Rose. Pastor. Sunday School 9·45 om .
Morning W,orship 11 o.m Evening Ser·
vice 7:30 p m . Wednesday Women's
Minis tries 9 o .m (meeting and prayer
Prayer and Bible Study 7 p.m .
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHR!ST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION . The Rev. William
Campbell , pastor. Sunday School , 9:30
am .; James Hughes, supt., evening ser·
vice 7·30 p .m Wednesday evening
prayer meeting , 7 30 p.m. Youth proyer
service each Tuesdoy .
FA!RVIEW BIBLE CHURCH , l etart , W
Vo ., Rt . 1, Mark Irwin , pastor . Worship
services , 930 a.m .: Sunday sc hool. 11
a .m .; evening worship , 7:30p .m . lues
day cottage prayer meeting and Bible
study , 9:30 a.m . Worship service .
Wednesday, 7:JO p.m .
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH. now ioca led
on Pomeroy Pike, County Rood 25 near
Flatwoods . Rev. Blackwood , pastor . Services on Sunday at 10.30 a .m . and 7:30
p m . with Sunday school , 9:30a .m. Bible
study , Wodnosdoy , 7:JOp.m .
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH
INC. Poorf St ., Middleport . Rev .
O'Dell Manley , pastor , Sunday school ,
9:30a.m .; Morning worsh ip 10:30 a .m ..
evening worship. 7:30 p.m. Tuesday ,
12:30 p.m . Women 's prayer meeting ;
Prayer and praise serv 1ce, Wednesday ,
7:30p.m .
R\JTLANO APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST , Elder James Miller B!ble
study, Wednesday , 7:30 p .m. ; Sunday
School . 10 a.m . Sunday night aervlce,
7:30p.m.
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS Harrisonville Rood; Earl Ftelda, pastor;
Henry Eblin, Jr ., Sunday School Sup1 .
Sunday School9:30 a. m.; Morning War·
ship 11 a. m .: Sunday evening tervlce,
7:30 .m .: Prayer Meotlng, Thurodoy, 7:30

p.m.

"

pastor : Don Will. lay leader Loca t ed ~~
Texos Commumty off CR 82 Sundoy
school. 9.30 a.m . , Mornmg worship ser vice, 10:45 o.m ., evening preackm g ser vice second ond four th Sundays , 7 30
p m , Chm t1an Endeo\lor , ft rs l and th 1rd
Sundays 7 30 p m Wednesday prayer
meeti ng and Bible study. 7 30 p m
JEH OVAH'S WllNE SSES 37319 State
Route 124 {One mile east of Rutland ).
Sunday. Bibl e lec tur e 9 30 o . m . Waf
chtower stud y, 10:20 a m , Tuesday , Bt ·
ble study , 7 30 p m . Thursday .
Tkeocroltc School 7 30 p.m Serv1ce
Meetmg, 8 20 p m
RUTLAND FREEWill BAPTrST Church Sol em St , Rutland Donald Korr . r
pas tor Bud Siewert . superi ntendent
Sunday School . 10 a m . e&gt;~e n1ng war
sh1p, 7 30 p.m Wednesday evenmg ser
v1ce 7 30p m
CHURCH OF GOD of Proph ec y. loca ted
on the 0. J Wh ite Rood off h1gkwoy 160.
Sunday School 10 am Superinten dent
John Loveday . F1rst Wednes day ntght of
month CPMA services second Wedn e 1
doy WMB meeting . th1rd through f if h
youth serv1ce . Georg e Croyle . pa stor
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Gra nt
Sl Middleport ; Sunday Sc hool 10 o m
morning wors h1p , 11 a . m even1ng wor ship. 7 p m . Wednesday evenm g B1bl e
study and prayer meeting , 7 p m A f filiated w 11h Sou thern 8cpt1s1 Conven
I ton
6RA DFORD CHURCH OF CHR! STRteky Gi lber t . pastor . Sieve P1cken s.
superintendent Sunday Schoo\ 9 30 a
m , Church Servtces, 10 30om
JUB!LEE CH RIST!AN CE NTER George's Cr eek Rood Rev C J. l emley
pastor , John Fel lure . supenntende nt
Church school. 9.30 a.m .. mormng wor shtp, 10 30, evemn g serv 1ce, 7 p m B1b\ e
Sludy Thurs 7 p m Classes f or o\1 ages
Nurse ry prov1ded for worship services
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH . Corner
of Sycamore and Second Si s . Pomeroy
The Rev W1lllom M 1dd\ eswortk. Pastor
Sunday Sckaol at 9 .45 a m. and Ct!urch
ServiCes II o m
SACRED HEART . Rev Father Paul 0
We lton , pastor Phone 992 -2825 Sa tur day even1ng Moss. 7·30 Sunday Mos s B
and 10 a.m
Confess 1on , Sa turday ,
7730pm
VICTORY BAPTIST - 525 N 2nd St .
M iddleport James E Keesee . pastor .
Sunday mo rn ing worship. 10 c m . e~o~en 1ng serv1 ce, 7. Wednesday evemng wor shi p, 7 p m Visilol1on . Th ursday . 6 30
p.m
TR INITY Ckns flan As sembly Coolvill e
Gi lbert Spence r pas tor Sunday
sc hool 9·30 o .m , mornmg wors hip II
a .m Sun day even1ng serv 1ce, 7.30 p .m .
midweek prayer serv1ce Wednesday ,
7.30 p.m
MOUNT Oliv e Commun 1ty Church ,
Lawf'en ce Busk . pastor. Ma x Folmer . Sr
Supenntendent Sunday School and mor ning worship. 9 30 a m Sunday even 1ng
service, 7 p m . Youtn meeting and Bible
study , Wednesday , 7 p m .
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypass . Rev Robert Sm 1th . Sr
pastor , Rev James Cundiff , ass 1st ont
pastor Sunday School . 9.30 om , morn Ing worship , 10·30 a . m .; eveni ng war skip , 7 30
Women 's Fellowsh 1p
Tuesdays. 10 a . m , Wednesday mghl
prayer serv1ce. 7 30 p m .
FAITH BAPTIST Church , Mason .neal
at Un1ted St eel Workers Un ion Ha ll
Railroad Street , Mosor1 . Pastor , Or.
James DeBruhl. Morn1ng worship 9:30
a.m ., Sunday School 10 .30 a .m Ev ening
Service , 7 p m Prayer meeting Wednes
day , 7.30 p.m . Mid-Week Bib le Study
Thu rsday , 7 p.m .
·
FOREST RUN BAPTIST -- Rev Nyle
Borden , pastor
Cornelius Bun ch
superintendenl Sunday schoo l 9 30
a .m ., second and fourth Sunday~ war
ship service at 2·30 p m
MT . MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
Main St. , Middleporl. Rev Cal vm M innis, pastor M rs Elvin Bumgardn er
supt. Sunday school , 9:30 o.m . w or~hip
service, 10·45 a m
NORTH BETHEL United Methodist
Church, Re v. Charles Domigon , poster .
Sunday School , 9 30 o.m .; Worship Ser ·
vice , 10.45 o m . Sunday Bible Study
7:00p.m .: Wodne sday prayer meeting '
'
7:30p .m .
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH , Route 1, Shade . Pastor Don
Black . Affiliated with Southern Boptil t
: onvention. Sunday school , 1:30 p .m .
Sunday worship , 2:30 p .m . Thursda.V
evening Bible study , 7 p.m .
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY , Racine,
Route 12". William Hoback , pastor. Sund~y school. lOo .m ., Sunday e\lening serv~ce , 6:30 p .m . Wednesday eening ser,
vice , 7.
CARPENTER BAPTIST, Rev. Freeland
Norris, pastor. Don Cheadle , Supt. Sunday School , 9:30a .m . Morning Worship
10:30 a.m . Prayer Service, olternot~
Sundays

'

'

�Pa e--8-The Da1ly Sent1ne1

Pomeroy

Astrograph

SCORPIO

&lt;Ocl

24-Nov . 22)

others
Cont•nue w1th the
program lind let f1me render the
verdrct

Tact and charm are two tools you
use ver';' advantageously toctav
but you could unconsctously
abuse the generos1ty Of persons
whoa,..edrawntoyou Takecare
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec

September 26, 1911

Somethmg on wh1ch you may
have given up Will fall w1thm
your reach 1n the year follow•n~
your btrthday Stay atop thmgs
when the opportuntty presents 1t
self you II want to be prepared

AQUARIUS (Jan 2G-Feb 19)
Treat everyone you meet today
With the same fnendshrp and
congen1al•ty you do those to
whom you fee-l close If you don t
a ntce person could be snubbed

21} You show your best s1de tOday
when you relax and don t try to

tmpress anybody When you at

LIBRA (Sepl 23 Ocl 23) There
could be stnnos attached to a
favor that someone has offered to

PISCES (Feb

tempt to display your better at
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 191
Don t let doubts neep 1n after
you've established plans wtth

pnce

.,~o1 Oho.~ DPD~ 1m~~ 1n~uolln1u

SUte ol On~ OtP• tm~nl olln\u an(t c~, 11w" , n Com pl j -.:~ _ 1,,
unde11o&lt;~ned Sullf' ~ • • •• I nl ln~w,nce ot 11 t Sl1te ~~ Ohoo ~Neb 1
Cttt• l' llh ol
DAIItVJ,ANO INSUiiiANCE CO ot M ~d ~ Sit! Jl ~ ;eM
ha
C I)(IIP~~d "th the l.l .. s ~ th ~ Stau apphubiP Ill t '"'
au tno&lt; I'll
dur n~ hf cu ent re1 o t ~n ;•ll n n • 1 1 ~1~ t~&lt;~ovropr ~ POUSliiE'&gt; at
nsu&lt;ano· II f u riJ on ~ h;n 1 &lt;Jiown ~, I\ '"""" ll't ~menlt a
""" " tltl'r •1 ollo• l (Ill DPI:~m btr )I 1931} .t.:lm l!'d ~stl l

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When bOld measures are called
for tOday , have the courage of
your conv1 Ct1ons Everybody IS
on your S1de and will support you
all the way

(Apnl 21&gt;-May 20)

You have everything gotng for
you tOday, so don't allow that lit
tie green 1mp of 1ealousy to goot
up your good ttme by betng too
possesstve of one you love

LEO (July 23 Aug

2l·Sepl 22) A

f.tmtiY member w111 have hts or
h.r teeltngs hurt today tf you
m•ke plans tn wh 1c h they ' re eJiC
clqjed Be cons tderate of ktn as
we\ ~s of pals

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WHEELHO~SE

SEASON CLOSEOUTS

11 ]

o,
1 I

t I •n Art n &gt;
;or, ond 10 ~

I~ &gt;

~~

ho,. n~

d
o•la .. an Of ~mb1
~\) / ~ 9( 00
•h I f ~

l 00 AI t I
~'""'

ll

930

" 06 .6 ?

C85 36" MOWER

n•

~ H~d• t e~lf.

1';.&gt;• 10 !

399

0 r "

o1n lta hn•
• d
00 Su Dl~ '

S l~ ; . : 18 1 ()0
orom• S 8306J9~ 4 ()fl I pPtll
'
SO J0 40f00 ~ edW I $ 1 l U ~IOOC&lt;~d S 000000UO
N w N! ~s ~I-ll R(OI ~l ""~ P to cb r '*o
~m• a d
dut' lm eolob••ll • etJo!(~u h" O h ~ ~;I.! , ndJoeRcb~ 1
~. ( ~lord J Suvt ol h " onrt o (II Oil
('&gt;&lt;"• I 34 I)

"

w

MODERN SUPPLY

Cl05 42" MQWER

SPECIAL

SPECIAL

LIST

Mam Street
992 2164
Pomeroy, Oh
The Store woth "All Kmds of Stuff"
For Pets - Stables- Large and Sma II An•ma Is
Lawns - Gardens

LIST

52766

J'1'----------------------------·

$2549

$3273

BAUM TRUE VALUE

the
singers,
Randy
ClonchMr
andand
Mr Mrs
and
Mrs
Don Sazon, the
Pallbearers, Claude Miller,
Evelyn Morrow, and a
spec1al thanks to John

CHESTER, OH
PH 985- 3301

PUBLIC NOTICE

Nottce ts hereby g1ven
that on Sa turday
September 26th 1981 at 10 00
a tn a publ1c ~ale wtll be
held at 105 Un1on Avenue
Pomeroy Oh10 to sell for
cas n
rne
fo11ow1ng
co ll a teral
1979 Chevrole t Monte
Carlo
sertal
No
1Z37H9045761 7
Tnc Farmers Ban k and
Sav 1ng s
Company
Pomeroj Oh1o reserve s
the ngh to btd at th,~ sale
and To w1 f hdraw the nbove
veh•cles prtor to ~a le Fur
th er Th e Farmer s Bank
and Sav 1ngs Co mpany
rese r ves the rtght to re1e ct
any or all o ds subm 1fTed
Further
vehtcles are
sold rn the cond1tton the y
ar e 1n w1th no expressed or
1mpl1ed warranttes g1ven

Cover Girl Suit!
l'rinted

£Th

4574

Keep Th1s Ad for
Future Refer ence

Call Ken Young
For Fast Servtce

Behold the newest the battle
1acket sutl that son the cove1 ot
ouo fall Wonler Calalog A greal
look and I ne w•th culottes
or fa¥or1te sk1rts pants
Prrnted Pattern 4574 M1sses

S11es 8 10 12 14 I&amp; 18
S11e 11 (b uS! 34) Jackel 1'4
yards 54 •n culottes !!A
$2 00 lot mh paH!In Add 50C
IO&lt; each paHem hlf posbge
and handlong S.nd lo
Anne AdJms
Pa«em Depl
1 'I 1
The Daoly Tnbune
(lnsort name of rour paper)
143 West 17 Sl, New Yon, NT

(9) 23 24 25 31c
PubltC Not1ce
NOTICE OF
_.. APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Augus t 31 1981 1n th e
Proba te
M e gs County
Court
Case No
23439
Helen R Beck
1209 S
Water Stree t Ken t Oh to
44240
was
appo tnfed
Exccut n x of the estate of
Maude
Ma e
Seals
Oe c eas~d late ot Rt No 1
ReedSVI ll e
Oh10
Me1gs
County
Robert E Bu c k
Probate Judge/ Clerk
(9) I I 18 25Jtc

985 3561
PARTS AND SERVICE

All MAKfS

•Washers
•Dryers
•Ranges
•01sposals
•Dtshwoshers
•Hot Water l onks

9 5 tfc

CATALOG Cocpon lor Free $1
patlern ms de Send Sl 50

THE STANDARD
OIL CO.
(SOHIO)
We are now dehvenng
home heat1ng otl tn all
parts ot Me1gs Co We
want new customers
Larry E Miller Dealer

1- lr&gt; Mt&gt;morodm

44 - A Jl&lt;~rlmt&gt;nh lor ~Ent
4~ - Furnt\hl!d ~ooms

Ads

1 - 'l"ilrd~.tll'

8- Public Sil le

~9- For Lea5 e

&amp; Auct on
9- Wanted to Buy

e MERCHANDISE

nong

1~ - scnool\ tns1ructoon
16- lii'ad o 111
&amp; CB Rep ;Hr
18 - W;~nted T~

~nil I

•4 - H•~

•REAL ESTATE

Real Bargam 111

For

Call to see!! •
Call Collecl
304 485 1631
Ask for Peyton
304 485-2154
Brokers Welcome
&amp; Protected

Home

Farm

and

Delivery of

Gas

D1esel

Heatong Ool

PRICED RIGHT.
CALL TODAY!
~---

&amp; Gran
Ferl•lrer

-- -

----

eTRANSPORTATION
II -

Autos lor

l-4 - Bus•nus Bu•loO•ngs

Aueaqe

"e&amp;l E~ t illeWilnt eo

stones nat gas fur
nace full basement and
c opper p1pes
Only

$37 500
WILL TAKE TRADE Tra1ler on small house
Have a 3 bedroom coun
try home wtth furna ce,
modern kttchen, full
basement and large lot

Only $30 000
CHANCE

Good
woodburntng
f1replac e
full base
ment, gas furnace , 3
bedrooms , 11/:l baths,
pat10 and J car garages

RT

&amp;• w 0
74- Motor cyc les
a - Bo;lls &amp; Molars

124 HOUSE AND

LOT ~ 8 room home, 3
or
4
bedrooms,
carpet1ng, c1ty water,
central atr and heat,
equ1pped k1tchen base
ment and 66 of an acre

76--- Aulo Parts&amp;

Acctnor•ts
11- AUIO Repa !r
11- Camptng Equ•pment

37 - Relltors

7 rooms 4 bedrooms

21ols Only $27,500

Sale

73 - V•n~

JJ- F1rm1 for Sale

HIGHWAY LOCATION
~

Jl !:.~

614 992 2181

ll- Trucks tor Sate

Jl- Mob•le Hom es
for Sill'

)6

POMEROY
LANDMARK

H- ~~ed&amp;

ll - Hom~"s for Sale

T P

ly room 12xl9, flue for
wood burner
1berty 2
bedroom
trail er
a1r
cond1t1oner porch and
leve l lot Only $9 600

YOUR

S.&gt;r le

Sen.-. tot~

&amp;

CALL:

Real Estate~ General- -

tJ - 1 IVP\10(~

$17 50

NEW LISTING - Fam

Farm Eau 1 Pmtnl
•1- IN a nle ll ro 8uv

Opportun tv
Money fo Loan

JS- Lon

budg e t

water 2 car garage All
very ntce $46 000

u

1 1 - Bu~.nu s

1J- Profus

SI - Mt \tC.tllnstrumenr
S8- F ru I\ &amp; 'Veget•ble\
S9 - For Salot or Tr•de

&amp; LIVESTOCK

e FINANCIAL
21

S 1 - H 0 u ~el'1ol d Goods
Sl- CA TV RactooEquopmenl
SJ - A vhuue\
S4- MtSC MercMc1n1hse
B - HII ldtng Sv ppl•e s
S&amp;-Pets tor :!..ue

e FARM SUPPLIES

Do

Mtddlt'port Ohto
Formerly
Dudley s
Flor• s l
&amp;
Orehel
Cc rdmiC S

No down payment,
monthly payment
around $175 00 per
month

46----S II&lt;I Ce lor Rt&gt;n1
4 1- Wanted to Rent
48- Equopm ent lor Aenl

and Fol!nd

NEW LISTING - L1ke
new ranch 4 bedrooms
Jl/., baths central heat

Owner woll finance
Ia qual• fled buyer

H ousl:'s l or Re nt
U - Mobole Homl!1
tor Rent

1- Announcem ents
4- G•"'eilwily

Phone
1- ( 614 )-992-3325

A ppro~e $2 SO per sq It

41 -

Thank ~

216 E Second Street

59 N 2nd Ave

e RENTALS

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

RGILB SR

PRICE: 12,500

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

14- Bus.neu Tr.l

We are now serv1ng all
of Metgs Co
wrth
Heattng Oil
D1esc1
Supreme
Gasol ne
comlete
l1ne
of
Lubrtcants
lor
the
farms &amp; tndustrv
If long dtstance, call cot
lect
Larrv E Mtller, Dealer
8 30 1 mo

CONSTRUCTION

1

Or Wrote Da•IY Sentonel Classof1ed Dept .
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oh . 45769

l - HI'IP Wanted
17- Soh.rlt on Wante d

STANDARD
OIL CO.
ISOHIO)

C. R. MASH

DOWNTOWN
MIDDLEPORT

PHONE 992-2156

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

U S Rt SOEost
Guysvtlle Oh1o
Phone614 662 3821
Authonzed John Deer
New Holland Bush Hog
Farm Equ pment
Dealer
FARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS &amp; SERVICE
USED EQUIPMENT
1- No 8600 D•esel Ford
Tractor w Cob
1 Model 275 D1esel
MF
1- Mode! 479 Hay Bmd
NH
73tfc

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING
And Home Maintenance
• Roof1ng of all types
• S1dtng
• Remodeling
• Free esttmates
• 20 Yrs expenence

PH 992 3&lt;60

992-3460

M1sc Merchand1ce

Un1on A&gt;Je
Pomeroy, Ohro
PHONE W2 3021
No oppoonlm8r&gt;" n-.:•uorr ~or
m e ly Kv! r&gt; Kud Seoul, 1hol)
&lt;J 1• I mo

STORE BUILDING

WANT AD INFORMATION

r~-- lo~l

Frt 1000500

SALES&amp; SERVICE

TOM HOSKINS
Ph 949

7 5 ft c

Custom kitchens and ap
pl1ances,
custom
bathrooms remodeling
plumbtn electnc c1nd
heattng

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH 992-6011
992 -7656

8 20

ttc

BARN ErrS
WELD SHOP
• ~fC'CI
• Alum1num
• C.Hftng • rrntl er Htt
ch t'i eMet.11 F.1bnca
t10n c;
Monday Fnday
4 p m to 11 p m
All Dnv s~1turdayo

Ph. 949-2285
l oc.ltcd M Maplewood
L.lkc tn R acme
9 2 1 mo

tilril

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Water Sewer·Eiectnc
Gas Ltn~D•tches
Wiiter Line Hook ups

Sep11c Tanks
County Cert1fted
Roush Line

Cheshoro, Oh
Ph. 367 7560

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
•
•
•
•

Backhoe
Excavattng
SeptiC Systems
Water Sewer &amp;
Gas L•nes
• Dump Tr uck
• Trencher
Ltcensed &amp; Bonded

Ph. 992-7201
5 2 l lfc

Farm Buildings
S1zes
From JOxJO"

SMALL

Utility Buildings
S1zes from 4k61o 12ll40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt, 3, Box 54
Ractne, Oh

Ph 614 843 2591
6 15 tfc

VInyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Btlulllul, Cullom
Built Glrages"

Call lor lrH siding
utlmltts. 149-2101 or
949·2160
No Sundly C1ll1
3· 1Hfc

Mond~y J

00 on SA h.triJAy
Tund•v ll'lrv Frod.t'l' l 00 t' M
tl're day H-I ore pubhu tocn
Sundily 1 OQ PM Frodav

ONLY $35,000 00- Noce

.• - H 0 me I

mprovemel'lll
n - PIYmb•nt &amp; Heallnt

6 room 2 story, frame
With 3 bedrooms, elec
baseboard heat, m
sutated, large porch,
pat1o, and nice lot View

Bl- E•to1VAII1'19

1!1- EieCirt(;al &amp;
Aelrrttralton

n -- Genero11 Ho1ul •n11

.._M M

Rt-~1r

17- u,,..tslerv

Rates and Other Information
Ul) to IS word I
one day lnHrhGn
Up to 15 words
lflret do1y onH"rllon
up to u wo;~rds ••• days lttUrtlon

u 01

"oo
57

oo

1Aveuge4 worcl5 ~r line )
Mobile Homt so1tes o1nd Yo1rd l;alu o1re accepted onlv wtlh cJUh
wlfh order B cent charte for ads carrli'm9 8~~ Num~r In Cilre ol
Th~

Senl1ntl
Tne Pubillfter reserve\ tfle t19hllo ed11 or rtt~ct ;~ny '"' deem!G
Tne Publisher Will noiiH' respons1blt lor more lh;~n ont

SMALL HOME on n•ce lot •n Mtddleport Two
bedroom bath lrvmg room up famtly room k1t
c hen laundry rm down $22,500 00

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

obtecllon•l

Jncorrecl•nu•rl•on

Phone 992-6312

of rover Only $35,000
IN

THE

WOODS

-

Qutet
renewed, one
bedroom, cedar lined
closets modern kitchen,
nat gas furnl!lce, city
water and nlce shady

lol J usl$21 ,500
Associates Gordon 8 ,
Helen L and sue Mur

phy

Hollow614 698 3290

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP
(Pomeroy Scrap
Iron &amp;' Melal)
Top pr.ces patd for auto
bod1es, scrap tron and
metals
1
m11e
west
of
Fa.rgrounds on Old Rt
33
'

Mon Fro 8 ]0 lo4 00
Afler Aug l
Pn 992 6564
830imo pd

hours

comforttng

famoly

May God

buld

delivery

Now Tak1ng Enrollment For Fall
Day or
Eve01ng
Clases.

~07

HEWETSON

Wetzgall St.
Pomeroy, Oh•o
9411nO

of

and

Freda

Ferguson
Ch1ldren's Day Care Ages
3 to 5 years Mondl!ly thru

No huntmg of any ktnd on
the J vance farms on Van
ce Rd Hunters Will be

Dl's Craft Supply, Sprong

fined

I·1...:==========~
You' II

tract

1t

down

much faster
w1 th a

the

WANT AD

675 1652

Valley Plaza Just west of
Holzer Hosqttal sCounted
cross st1ch, DMC floss
AIDA cloth tn all colors,
call for free lessons 614
446 2134

Installed
StarI tng

$1295sq.

* Televtstons

*• Moshng
Aneennos
(both

Bradbury Rood

9 24

I mo

yd.

Green 95

~

sq

yd

{Extra Good)
Reg S16 95 sq
Installed Vd

Now Sl3!11sq
Vd

RUTLAND FURNITURE

COMPLETI!
RADIATOR
SERVICE

742-2211

Main St.

From the Smallest
Heater Core to the
Lariest Rad1ator
du!ttor

~AYTHAN BIGGS

Spetiahst

rs Experience

ANY

PERSON who has

anything to giVe away and
does not offer or attempt to

offer any olher lhong for
sale may place an ad In this
column There will be no
charge to the advert1ser

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and

MI~R ELECTRIC

SERVICE
For all of your w•rmg needs.

S~vel_l _ l

let
G.eorge
Miller
check your prennt etec
trrcal syltem
Res1dentta 1
&amp; Cornmerc1al

Wrlle your own ad and order by mall wllh this
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you gel
results Money not' refundable

Call742-3195
2 81fc

POMEROY,O.
992-2259
NEW LISTING- MIDDLEPORT - Eye cal
chmg home on an eye
catchtng street The two
story home has 1ts
ortgmal woodwork and
1ts own hardwood floors
Three bedrooms, full
basement
front and
rear porches help make
th1s older home a real

1 female cat, gOOd mouser
&amp; 2 kottens Call245 5804
4 yrs old Chmese Sh1zu dog
House
broken,
loves
children Cail446 0167

NEW LISTING- MIDDLEPORT- Neal as a
pm and cute as a button
No more dishpan hands,
lad1es K1tchen has a
dtshwasher, mtcrowave
oven and range ThiS 1112
story home s1ts on s1x
acres, f1ve of wh1ch are
wooded
Storm wtn
dows, storm doors,
wood burner full base
ment and two car
garage That's a lot of
property for the price

lookmg for a s1x year old
home. on one acre of
ground that has a wood
burner and a1r cond1
hontng? Well. thts IS 1t
Three bedrooms, bath,
water softener and full
basement It has Perma
Payne wmdows, carpet,
and elec
baseboard
heat

NEW LISTING
SYRACUSE
Ex
cellent care IS what th1s
three bedroom home
features, plus a low tn
terest assumable loan
What a ternftc com
bmatton
Range and
refr1g mctuded along
w1th storm wmdows,

NEW LISTING
CHESTER - Do you

tens• ve
remodelmg.
• E lectroca I work
• R ooflng work
14 Years
E xperoence
Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583

hnd yourself WIShing for
more closets, and a
workshop for your hus
-band's tools? Let us
show you this home,
that has some new plush
carpet There are many
extra features 10 th1s
one floor plan G1ve us a

8 27 1 mo

COAL MINING COUN·
TRY Ranch lype
home on 2 S acres of

call $43,.500 00

HARRISON
1V SERVICE
NOW
OPEN

)Wanled

(( l)For
~~~!t~~emenl
Renl

Cllrus lree 6 fl fall Nice
for a Mall or decorat1ons
Call379 2408
3 kollens 614985

1

•

Used Color TV Sets tor
Si11C

NEW PHONE NO

992-6259

176 Sycamore St
Mtddleport, Ohto
9 21 ti c

17

19, ':-~---20
21
22
23.
24
25

If has

melal slorage buoldong,
cellar house, garden
spol, front and Side
All of lhls plus a lhree
bedroom home, wolh
hookup lor wood burner
$32,000 00
MIDDLEPORT- Cule
lfltle home that needs a
few repairs Brick 1112
slory home lhal can be
yours for lust a small
price. $20,000.00.
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland, Jr.

27. -:----~-

992-6191
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949-2UO
oonle Tumor 992-5692
RogerTumer

29

31

'

lovable ground

26

30. _ _ _ __

211nru OCT. 24
. Now 517.50
. Now 522.50
• Now 527.50
• Now S29.50

32. _ _ _ __

Long ha1red ktttens
1
male 1 female Grey and
white 7 weeks old Lt"er
61~

992 2531 af

Lost and Found

6

Lost

part

German

Shepherd puppy black wolh
vlnconlly Call256 1668

35 " -'----"--''----

KArs

BEAUTY SALON

PH , "2-2725
169 N 2nd
Moddleporl, Oh 1o
9 20 1 mo
'-----..:_:::...:..::.::::...~

.

,l

Neals Auction has moved
S on Rt 2 GallipoliS Ferry

W Va

Every Sal

7PM

Buy and Sell Lonme Neal

Sal , Sept

10 30

26 al

from

bank

'"

ShOp Also 76 Ford J;.. ton
ptckup Min1mum bid Not
responstble for acc1dents
Howard Beasley Auc
tloneer
West Columbia W Va New
and used merchandtse

Fro , Sepl 25 2 dealers Not
responstble for acc1dents

9

Wanted to Buy

WANT TO BUY Old fur
n1ture and Anttques of all
krnds, call Kenneth Swam,
256 1967 m the eventngs
CASH PAID for clean, late
model used cars Smtth
BuiCk Pontlac, GAihpolts,

WE

BUY

FURNITURE

We sell furmture Sagraves
Furn1ture 446 4775
Buy1ng Gold Paying cash
for anyth1ng stamped lOK,

14K, 18K, and denial gold
Class nng, wedd.ng nngs,
watches Clarks' Jewelry
Store Gall1p0l1s, 4.46 2691,
Pomeroy 992 2561

FOUND 1981 Boys Meogs
Hogh School class rong Call
992 27261o odenllfy
Lost

Junk cars wtth or w1th out
motors, scrap metal. and

balleroes Call 388 9303
Wanted to buy used
clan net Call-446 061-4

Med1um slze black

female dog on !he Bashan
area No collar Please call

614 9~9 2360 or 614 949 2194

wanted to buy bunk beds or
388 9655 or

twm bed Call

13

Help Wanted

Clhree (3) to lour (41 days
per weekl Excellent star
hng satay w1th fnnge
benef1ts In serv•ce or1en
tatton prov1ded followmg
employment
CONTACT
Personnel Department.
GallipOliS Development
Center, Gall1p011S
Oh
45631 Telephone 614 446
16~2

AAJEOE

Electnc bass player for an
upcom1ng
Country
&amp;
Western band Call 446

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE

IN

SURANCE
been
ca n
celled'
Lost
y o ur
operators L icense? Phone

992 2143
18

Br1 ck and Block lay .ng
ftreplaces ,
all
work
guaranteed Call 379 2123

bed 1oom
h0us e rn
Rutland W II se ll on land
contr ac t 614 742 2173

H ILL TOP

55 AC RE FARM Hou se
excet le nt bank. barn ad
tacent Pomeroy Buddtng
lots ava 1 ab le
Poss tbl e
land contract M ake offer
614 385 6740

SHARPING

SERV I CE Ctrcular saws 6
112 to 44 1n Chatnsaws,
blades of all kmds and
etectrtc drtil btts Phone

Female wanttng workmg
female to help share ex
penses Must be mature
neat and have references
Call 367 0692 after 5PM

Would l1ke to do babys1t
tlng 1n my home tn R o
Grande Cal! anyt 1me 245

BEDS IRON, BRASS, old

ftlm,
Tuesday
Sent1mental

furn1ture, gold, Stiver
dollars, wood 1ce boxes,
stone 1ars, antiques, etc,
Complete
households
Wrtte M D Miller, Rt 4,

eventng
value

Reward call304 675 3447
Yard Sale

1

Pomeroy Oh Or 992 7760

3 Famoly Yard Sale 4 112
m1tes out 141 Wed Sat
Clothes all s1ze, what nots,
mens clothes, 1eans, and
m1sc items
Garage Sale Porterbrook
SubdiVISion
Lots
of
chtldrens clothes Fn 25 &amp;
Sat 26 9 to 5 Water
melons

CHIP WOOD Poles max
d1ameter 14" on largest

end $12 .50perlon Bundled
slab
$10 50 per lon
Oeloverd to Ohoo Pallel Co,
Rock
Spr1ngs
Pomeroy 992 2689

Rd ,

Gold, Stiver
ster11ng
,ewetry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar

GtgantJc Yard Sate 123 4th
Ave Friday &amp; Saturday

ber Shop, Moddleporl 992
3476

Bog Yard Sale Choldrens

No 1tem to large or small
w111 buy 1 piece or complete

clothes, shot guns, gurtars,
electric heaters
Much
more Georges Creek Rd,

112 mile fromn Bulavllle
Rd Tnurs 24 &amp; Fro 25
Yard Sale rnstde V.nton

corp.

llm•ls

Clolhes,

tables, old secretary, bed
spreads, curtatns 388 8747

911115 Frl only
Gtgant1c Yard Sate at
Mary Layne restdence,

Cheshire
Oh
Sepl
26,27,&amp;28 9 001111 dark

household New, used and
anllq\Je Call992 6370
Scrap metals, batteries
rad1ators, gmseng, yellow
root.
and merchandise
brokenng Varper Halste

ad Salvage Company, 300
E levenlh Slreel 675 5868
Also Flea Market open
da1ly
Open
Monday

Froday I 5 pm
WANT to buv standmg t1m
ber, 5 acres or more Rocky

Wooldrodge 614 289 2476 or
614 493 2591

Gallla
Co
Volunteer
Squad
Rummage Sale OLD lawn mowers, cheap,
ocl 1,2,&amp;3 Old Rt 160 304 675 4828
Volunteer Squad butldrng
9 001111 ??
PLYWOOD half onch &amp;
three elghl5, musl be good
Garage Sale
Saturday on one s1de, panel1ng quar
sept 26, 9 ooam 10 • Songle ter mch, the same 304 375
mattress &amp; box springs,
clothing, books, 1973 Chevy 5220
Stationwagon, mlscellane

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

ous Off 160 onlo Bu1av111e
Rd Approx 2 miles, lefl
onlo Kerr Belhel Rd Wal
ch lor signs orca II 446 2826
Garage Sale I 1 Henkle Ave
Sal Sepl 26, 9 00 5 oo
Drapes, house shuners, I
&amp; 1 'Zenllh' record
I •lllillY&lt;!r, kllchenwear, bed
winter

coats,

boys• leans &amp;
ctolt&gt;es.

3 Family Yard Sale Fair
field Acres, Fairfield Cen
lenarv Rd Salurdlly 26, 9 5

'

lime yard sale Fri. &amp;
Sat
Clolhlng &amp; mise
Items. 456 Beech Sl , Middleport.

Oh.

Student page needs for
ateast 12 mo after school
weekends, and hOI1days
$2 35 per hr Interest tn
books and ltbrary helpful
Basic duties tnclud1ng
shelving books, checktng m
books, and errans Must be
16 yrs old Stnct four week
probattonary penod Call
446 READ

'
You can have a plea sa nt
and profitable career
se111ng
custommade
lubr1cants to 1ndustr•al
commerc1al and farm ac
counts 1n your area Com
panv
patd
tra1n1ng
program No 1nvestment or
overn1ght travel Calli 800

527 1193

8 30

5662

Wanted to do BabY Stttmg
my home or yours E)(
per.enced
Reterencl'S
available Phone any t1me

245 5855
would !1ke to do b abystt
t1ng Rodney Cora area
Call 379 2706 anyttme

..._

~

~

sep"'ees
11

Help Wanled

MANAGEMENT
OP
PORTUNITY
We are
seek1ng
quallfted
1n
d1V1dua1s to tram for
management pos1ttons m
Hardmans Home Centers tf
you are h1ghly mot1vated
destre respons1btlttv, per
sonal
growth
profeSSIOnalism and are
wtlttng to relocate, send
your resume tn conf1dence
to Stan Hardman, Hard
mans Home Center, Gen
Off1ce, PO Box 1.40 Spen

cer, WV 25276
PRIVATE duty nurses
LPN'S or R N's for male
patient at Ptnecrest Care
Cenler 304 675 594 1 or 675

1524
NOW tak1ng appl1cattons at
P1ckens Cab Co applv .n
person, Pt Pleasant

Amb1ous boy needs work
badly W1ndows washed,
yards cleaned, &amp; Odd 10bs
After school &amp; on Sats Cali

4ol6 2716
Someone to care for me tn

my home 992 2686

Nurses atd Day t1me Ex
per1enced Good referen
ces Call 742 2288
Have room board for
disabled person also have
vacancy
for
bedfast

pallenl 992 6022

us rlghl away and get on
lhe ellglblllly llsl el 992
2156(&gt;1' 992 2157

Woll take care of 2 elderly
ladles tn your home l~
mtle east of Darwtn 992

3888
13

lnsurante

SANDY AND BEAVER In
Earn
$30011000
en
velopeslposslble wllh our
proven envelope program
Free delalls Enclose slam
pelf envelope Fulk Endy,
Sox 25339 Chicago, IllinoiS

fOr atmost a century
Farm, home and personal
property coverages arP.

60625

available

Experienced person to do
cleaning tor local business
In
Pomeroy
Ap·
proxlmalely 4·5 hours per
day some light main
tenance required Musl be
bondable
Send work
history and references lo
Box •729 A c ·o Dally Sen·
llnel, Pomeroy, Ohio.

surance Co has offered
services for fire Insurance

coverage In Gallla Counly

dlvtdual

to

meet

needs

Ray Wed~meyer ,
Phone 388 82.fl

orl

Contact

agenl

GrOOJp Medocal Coverage
for smell business, as well

an Individuals
Major
medical, basic hospital,
group life Insurance com·
blned 1o give you one of lhe
beSI programs available
Ver~ competallve rales.
Experienced man to do For more Information.
body work and palnllng Steve McGhee, 446 0818 or
446 0552
7&lt;12 3154

a.

'

Need more room? But
afra1d you ca nnot alford
t he rnterest T h s brand
new brtck an d wood 4
bedroom, 2 bath br leve l
home can be yours at on tv 8
pet tnterest w1th no m oney
down 1f you have enough
equ,ty 1n your e)(•st mg
home Have 5 or more
fa m ly member s and earn
from $24500 to 27500 For
further 1ntormatton call
614 593 5571 or 614 992 6312

TV serv.ce ca lls Call 992
2034 Also u sed color TV lor
sale

614 378 6339

Would ltk e to rent tractor
wtth backhoe 614 949 2182

Finane! at

Sa le by owner 3 bedroom
electnc home c1 ty water
wall to wall c arpet Lot
l OOx 400 Plet n y shruberv
Level lot $38500 W1ll trade
lor acreage Empty ready
to move n to Call Eleanor
Reynolds 614 667 6648 after

6p m
21

Busmess
Opportuntty

Pnme Servtce Stat1on
Prop for Lease 1st Ave
low rental, mvestment req
For mfo &amp; 1ntervtew call
Mr Parry 30.4 342 8161 or
Mr Osburne8 30to4PM
Own and operate candy
confection vend1ng route
Pomeroy &amp; surroundmg
area
Ple asant bu s.ness
H1gh proftt tfems Start
part Ttme Age, expenence
not 1mportatn ReQutres

$2 295 00

lo

$4,590

oo

capttal
Wnte
mclude
phone number Bo~ 411
Owatonna Mn 55060

HOU SE Meadowbrook Ad
dll1on 3 bedroom famt ly
room w1th f1repiace cen
tral a.r basement 304 675

1542
Older 7 roam 'l. story hom e
on Ma1n Street PI PI
Shown by appotntment
only 675 1723
Two story f r ame at 120
Htg hland Three bedrooms
sleep.ng porc h large llvtng
and dtntng rooms screened
porch k 1tchensand pant1v
Full basement wtth laun
dry hookup Needs some
repa1r
Poss ble owner
fman cmg Ca ll 304 273 9533

or 273 3426
22

Money to Loan

PI
FHA VA Convent1al Home SANDHILL Road
Loans, Columbus Ftrsf Plea sa nt 3 bedrooms, Ph
Mortgage Co 463 Second baths, doubl e garage
Ave Galltpolts Oh 4.46 Owner wtll f1nance lm
med1at e oc c upancy
304
7172
675 5817

23

Profess1onat
Servrces

32

Mob1le Homes
for Sale

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

- --

Pnces reduced on all
mobile hom es and travel
trailers
TRISTAT E

MOBILE

HOM ES

GalltpOIIS CALL 446 7572

PIANO TUNING&amp; Repaor
Lane Dante Is 742 2951 or
992 2082 Have you hugged
your p1ano today'&gt;
HARPER AdulT Care Cen
ter provtd1ng the personal
care your elderly need 10 a
home ltke atmosphere
vacanc1es now ava1llble

call 304 675 1293
Ehm Resthome Care for
hafd1capped, aged, or bed
pat1ent
Temporary or
limited care Or conhnuous
home w1th us Equ1pped for
wheel cha~r 742 1266

7 room s and bath 4 lots
Needs same r epatr F tnan
ctng availa ble. S25000 Call
after 5 614 992 7284

For sale or trade house
and bus.nes s butidmg on
two lots atso 2 'Vacant lots
w1th well and sept1c Phone

S1tuat1ons Wanted

chold acceplable Call 245
5835

4

Wtlt gtve ptano lesso ns 1n
your home Call 446 8074 by
September 30

Ptano tun 1ng and repatr
Love your neighbor tune
your P1ano
Btl! Ward,
Wanted female to share wards Keyboard 446 4J72
apartment w1th same 1 Galltpolls

12

GET VALUABLE tralnong
as~ young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
tlnel route carrier Phone

Sand blasttng on trader
old ca rs small 1tems Call
4-46 8274 after 5 30

a m 4 30

p m cst

3 bedr oom house 2 ac res 2
baths family room Full
basem ent
gar age
949

2079

Wanted to Do

388 8564

Hostesses wanted for Out
ch Ma1d Fashtons Show In
vtte tnends, ne•ghbors,
relattves, and aquatn
tances and earn free Dutch
Ma1d Fashlons of your
chotce Interested part1es
call collect 1 614 574 5062

L fe Es tate Farm proper
va lue $45 250 00
L1t e
estate value $8 701 58 Ca ll
992 6747 evenmg s

tv

4053

388 8192

LOST 2 rolls of exposed

YMil Sale Mon , Sept 28.
9-2. Rustle Hills, Syracuse,

I

&amp; Auction

Lost b1llfold 1n Gallipolis

~

Longer Hair

3791784

Part t•me
posttton
ava1lable for RN's on the
8 00 a m to 4 lOp m sh1ft

Public Sale

8

Call 4ol6 0051
Found close to Powell's
Teaford Key cham w1th 6
kevs Can be claimed at
Teaford Realty, Pomeroy

call4ol6 0390
BY OWNER A bdr , spl1t

Ltberty St Pt Pleasant
Cancelled if ra10

red collar, Fnendly Ridge

33

Wave Length For

YARD sale Salurday, 9 26
1111 &gt; 110

Rulland 5ellong all mer
chandlse of This &amp; That

~120

garage and full basement

3 bdr home for sa le by
owner Reasonable down
payment
take
over
payments
Located ott
Patr1ot Cadmus Rd Ca ll

m1sc

81, 10 00 am

Across

porch and fruit trees

18

lots of

367 7101

do laundry $37 500 00

I

&amp;.

wtth

Haven, WV

11

lreasure $32,000 00

no more runntng up and
down basement steps to

These
rates
tnclude d1scount

New

house

level hvmg room &amp; dlntng
room combination, eat 1n
kitChen , lg famtiY rm 2
112 baths, located 10 Tara
Estates, Club house and
pool pr1vdeges
$75,000
ftrm Kyger Creek School
Otstnc t Shown by appt
only call 446 9403

Ohoo Call 446 2282

pallo and carporl Uhh·
ty room m the kitchen,

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes · ex-

Dnve,

.5024

E

NEW LISTING- FIVE
POINTS Are you

Pomeroy, Oh
Ph 992-2174
57 lie

"'"':"''"' "'"-11

New 3 bdr

.,u~~i~EE'"8~"II $45.000

:::

Cats and k1"ens Whtte, long
hair, blue eyed Pursslan
stock, some black Call245

Shepherd, 1 Tennessee
Walker coon hound, 304
882 2053 after 5 or weeken

$39 900 00

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

SEPT
S2o.oo
525 . 00
530.00
535 . 00

Giveaway

4

ds

GOOD SELECTION OF REMNANTS
Buy Now&amp; Save$2-S6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed, carpet installed free
w1th pad. Good select1on Roll Ends Remnants $2 . 50 up. Grass carpet $4.99 yd.
Green and Brown
Dr1ve A Little- Save A Lot

te lescop1ng &amp; tower)
•Component Systems
*Portable Radtos
* Automob1le Rodtos
• Tope Decks
*Tubes &amp; Stm1
conductors
All types of bottertes &amp;
Chargers

PHONE 992 2276

cash n Carry
I Roll Each
Brown
Blue,

WI Padding

FRANCE
ELECTRONIC
SUPPLIES

1~~ ~N~~f~~~~"~i'fr"'

Salurday, Seplember 26, 10
t11t 5 Mens, womens, boys
clothes
ttems

DOGS, males, 1 German

'48oo and up

RUBBER BACK Mc~~~~~~pel

~~~;~~u$~~1~ 1

GARAGE Sale 178 Midway

I'd hke at least two week•
year orr

box !rained

lARGE SELECTION OF REMNANTS
CARPET

Homes for Sate

Yard Sale al2105 Jefferson
Avenue, PI Pl September
24 25 9 am

CONTROL hunger and lose ter5p m
we1ght with New Shape
D1et Plan and Yydrex Small female pup, to good
Wafer Pills Fruth Phar home, has had all her
macy
shots 458 1552

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

28

FRAN'S
CERAMICS

No trapptng on our proper
ty By owners, Max1ne D1d
die Sellers, Roy and Ltllten

Friday
Phone
Doltoe Campbell

ALL STEEL

SERVICES
Want Ad Adverhs.ng
Deadlines

2160or9~2 612.5

FOR SALE

on September 4th 1981
1n t he MetQS Co u nty
Probate Cour t Case No

~- Happy

Weds 10 00 8 00
Thurs II BOO

If Long D1stance
Call Collect
9 21 1 mo

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

cl

Tues 1100500

Pome•oy Oh o

Publtc Nottce

I - Card

New Hours
Man 11 007 00

Addons ond
remodel1ng
_ Roofmg and guller
work
Concret work
_ Plumb1ng ond
eleclrral work
(Free Eshmotes)
W?t.11')o•m7JU

10011 Pnnl NAME, ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZE, and STYU NUMBER
Busy woman' Worktng woman7
Dress for less spend less l1me
work - choose a wardrobe from

S4

Styhst Mark Mora Dove
Cuthbertson Ctndy Cuth
bert son

V C YOUNG Ill

our NEW FALL WINTER PAnERN

BOGGS

HAIR REMEDIES

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Tr

r,.,-lf.,_ -/lJ-.~5

Pall••rn

Horses, pon1es, horse
trailer, rtd1ng lessons Hoof

Qroffoll,

637 Grant Sl., Middleport,
Ohio. 9 4. Sept 26 Many

"Now that I've retired

Sent•

OUR BOARDING HOUSE
Yard Sale, John Manuel's
Dorcas Rd , Racine, Oh
Friday 25, Sat 26 8 •
Clolhlng, mise ltems

J kittens, 2 male, 1 female
2 gray and wh1te, 1 stnped,
6weeksold 675 2948

Business Services
SIZES 6-18

992·2156

gasol1ne, heatmg 011 and
dtesel fuel, call Landmark,
992 2181. Pomeroy, Oh

Bless
each and everY one of vou
Linda Johns

Publtc NOtiCe
23525 Charles Edw1n Hum
phrey
Reedsvtlle
Oh10
4577 2
was
appo•nted
Executor of the estate of
May Hunter Humphrey
Deceased tate ot Rl'ed
svilte Ohto
Robert E Buck
Probate Judge/ Clerk
( 9) 11 18 253tc

For

Sleele who spenl endless

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
- - - -Public Nohce

In Metgs County

Announcements

3

manv friends who sent
flowers, cards, fOOd and
prayers, to Jeckie Parsons
who conducted his funeral,

Resources,

p1ng, gun safety and trap
shoot1ng
Everyone
welcome

675-1333

lhe death of my son, Her
bert A McQuaid To the

Natural

archery, fly fiSnong, !rap

446-2342

-A- DAY

Walton League

several merchants and per
sons
Registration will
startat9a m Therewtllbe
several events of canoeing.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

stncere thanks to all the
manv fnends and relataves
who shared the sorrow of

lzaak

Meigs Co. Fish and Game
Club, Racone Gun Club,
Gold Ridge Gun Club and

937-Buffalo

CHECK OUR PRICES BEFORE BUYING!

Anm ll~d

II!

of

67S-Pt Pleasant
4)8-Leon
S76-Apple G,.ove
77J- Mason
882- New Haven
895- Letart

1 would like to extend my

Oh~Pb )

I'

The

Area Code 304

In Gallta County

LAFF

ttems

of Meigs co woll sponsor
lhe Nallonal Fishing and
Hunllng day for children al
Royal Oak Park, Saturday
Sepl 26 wllh help and
donallons form Ohio Depl

Mason Co, W Va

Card ol Thinks

h~l

PO
o
bern

992- Middleport
Pomeroy
Y85-Cheswr
J4J- Portland
247- Letart Falls
\ 949- Ractne
742-Rutland

367- Cheshtre
388-Vtnton
24S-RIO Grande
2S6-Guyan Dtst
64J ~ Artfbta 01st

GEMINI (May 21 June 20) You

and your mate may not be m

614

446~ GaiiiPOIIS

Announcements

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call
-446 0294 .

Metgs Co Area Code

614

ALSO: BARBED WIRE

&amp;o301

INTEROC£AN INS CO olin~ ~n~oolr, S .rtr ol I'll! •• • ""~c omol,.d
.. r n, ' " u,
JPapp
hi~IJ 1 n~
ouho •a r •n~l •

~

ver
VIRGO (Aug

3

Classified Pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

In Mason County

u lo ub c tit'~ m n~ mp ond
[)~tO h" \i!'
lt ~fROO~ t

I&lt; e
lll•• " "
lJ
•no .oulhOt •a
~u Ilk lh!&gt; lu r~n !til 10 I an\.!11 n lh) I• r l ~ diiiJ!O~ Jlf bu 111'~ &gt; 01
n~ urdnt
lh 1 nanc ~ I ond 1o1m
no,. , b• I&gt; d nu~l Ia f"'f" lo
~~
t'Jet!n Ol loiiO OI \ on Dfceml• J I 1981) ~dm llt'\l h'&gt;lt' l\
~I ll
llOBGOC
1b
"
1 I I' 9 11 00 ; p
~ ~· 9'&lt;~
~~ 00
o11 r Sl U I~ I 019 CO
pen 1 ~
S i l l} I') l ~l 00 Nel 4 ~ ~' $ ~1 ~9~ 8 00 Cop ill l 0 l()U )J()O(I
IN WI "'t SS WI-ll ~f(J
h.r•~ 1'4'•rumo ub o ~~ m1 nam ~~~~
au td m1 •.1 l lollf oil •ffiot CoiJn'bu Qno h" ca, '"~dar ROOP I
~mhiO!d
s~1 (II 1 u &lt; rr o 1)1 o
151-• 3331

oCn 'n e - r~.
w •b

n

22)

, 1 01: ~ nat
INOlANA INSURANCE CO o l' MJ(]
omu ll'd " h "" '" ' o n 'i al• •u~ oo

hi 'i l~ oiO no

~

(June 21 July

\ have the.r hand out Don't be a
Scrooge but also don't be a push

SI.IIPOI Qn(l {l!&gt;pa 1m~n Glln,u "" ' ~ C• n•f(~lr o lt~m~ jfl[P
In•
~1 dP on~ Supet ntern:k'n o1 o u '"'t ol tl~ ~lal~ o• Onoo ~r tD I

rf r 1.., tn~
GUAf!ANTEE TRUST LIFE INS CO c lh ·~o Sl•lr J '
r~
romp•d &lt;r h O,. • ~ vi ii SI !I"•DO.ClD r~ l•nl
&lt;~lllf "1
dY ~tn~corllfd
l!d'-' rll ; ,Up lPPOO I.II~Do A• ;o l
""''"r• on rn• mu1u.1 plan II 1 n.1nr..r1 con~• on &gt; 1ho01n o, 1
.rnnu; I; em~n114h•••to-t'nJ ullu" onllrombr 11 980 Ad m
! ~ I •1'&gt;1'1
S9J JU4~l LU
•bilfl 1iG0400)000 Su plu
$ 4 ?6 44 t00 0
n
S EOO ~ I8?CC O t, ~ 1 u •
1 ~4 JIP? m
IN W II N f~ WMIR(OI I "' ' " h• ~vnl un~; tlo'&lt;l m, "'"" lo~
r~ \Pim• wJ c nr111,., l C o~ • Du l)h O tr
L1 1 J nd~~lr llObetl
lll.&lt;th~ 11 &gt;uo e l l »&gt;~•"
~ llto
(S..d ?9)1
I'

hi&lt;r tr

Ro i! lud J SulollludroOI!.

Sl;lru10ho(l0~o~r • l ul l,u; ~~- lrdi~ OIC~npr;nu - r•~
"' If ~nffl ~ ~p.&gt; ntonMnl h ' "~ ~ ~ f P o ~• ~b for Uo o • ~•rb,

~~ ~~oOnoe[•J&lt; ""~a nua r t "

~'!Iii ~lOt

CANCER

The Da11

time saying "no" to persons who

FROM GATES, BULL GATES AND
CHAIN LINK GATES
IN
ALL SIZES.

N WI NE SS 1111-llRIQI
ha Y! fttu lo 1ub c to&gt;d m name •nd
au f'dmv tlllobto lt• o:diiColumb~ Oho lh (la , ~n~d lt Robfrt
l R1 {hlord It Sum !A I 1 w dOno 0t o
f'Vo• 1041

IN \'jiPU SS 't'IHf Rf (f I ,~., h€teunto ~u~rr llfoll "'' nal'1e olld

Cei l 1otc~

TAURUS

&gt;1h~ wn

1 10 1e1 $ 1/f,~II?JJOO Sn~lu \ ~dm t!'d m t t' 136 7[)7&lt;1 49100 l"'t.ll• l? /~~94 4 00 '\tro
691 S8l GO l~come SJOJ 510 705 00 t: o ~e~a '" e; p Ul 19 1 l') !)48 00 IMo me 1 1~342 13900 (opl'll(J Ufh
$297 BIS B~ 00 Nrt m~ 1 11 0~ 096 H'l 00 C•o &lt; $1 J9B1'JIJ 00 J?()4 ]40 ?02 00

r;.,.,

ce llent gains can be made by both
part1es tf you and another person
can work 1n un1son and mutually
atd each other Ne1ther should
teel hiS share of the 10b 1S
tougher

1981

mognl nave much too dolfl~ull a

complete accord as to what
fam t ly chores should be done
today If you can•t agree, draw
lots

Ex

01 "'""ul i llltmenlto h••e btt~ a~ l otio ,. ~ oo O«embtr 31 19BIJ

$ 214~1354900

l Ri lthlold r Swill oll~lu 1nce ~I Otno

19)

WE STOCK STEEL PANEL

$1 ()1i

r1u&gt;~O m~ •~• t 10 bf 111 •eo 1 t CotJm bu

Fnday, September 25,1981

ARIES (March 21 · Apnl

lr----------------------------

IS 1ppr~p &lt;alP

11 CtJ!ld I on

20-March 20)

You may tn all gOOd tatth prom tse
to do somethtng for another, only
to fmd out later that 1t won T be
poss1ble Th1s person will un
de1 stand You won t l ose fa ce

tnbutes you come off all wrong

do for you Before ac ce pt.ng
make sure you don t m •nd the

M1ddle ort, Oh10

neal istate

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOME S
KESSEL S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOM E SALES
4 Ml
WEST GALLIPOLIS RT
35 PHONE 146 3868 or A46
7274
1977 70xl4 gas Jbdr bath
&amp; 112 part furn Wtndow
awntngs $10 000 Johnson's
Mob1l e Hom e Brokers 446

3547

56x14 1980 model, total elec
tnc , com plete ! y furn
del1vered and set up on
For sale on lend contract vour lot $8 995 Johnsons
House and 2 mobile homes Mobile Home Inc 446 3547
located at Buiav1lle W1ll
sell separately or together
Mob1te MOdular trade m s
Call 4ol6 3437
1972 Torcet 12 x 65
2
bedroom balcony front k1t
FOR SALE BY OWNER 3 chen 2 a1r condrt1oners
bdr home localed al 12~ washer and dryer $8900
Garfield Ave 2 acres runs 1972
Baron 12 X60
2
from SR 7 to Ohio R1ver
bedroom
ba lcony front
Full basement, f1n1shed I1Vt1lQ room central a r
1
rec room, 2 ftreplaces 2 cof'ld1hon $7450 1971 Shultz
31

Homes for Sale

112 balhs, In ground con

crete POOl, all new carpet
new pa1nt 1ns1de and out
Wtli cons1der your home or
mob1le home In trade
Owner will cons1der ftnan

clng al 10% APR aller
reasonable down payment.
tf interested call 446 1546
for an appointment

531 41h Ave 2 bdr , central
a1r &amp; heat1ng, large gar

den Financing available
Mid $40's Call4o16 2158
By owner 3 bdr, bnck ran

ch on city close to slores &amp;
schools

A II mOdern con

venlences
-446 9863

Priced to sell

2 year old, 6 rooms and
bath, basement, 2 acres, 4
m lies from Iown, ell'(
schools. Price reduced
$37,900 DO Call4ol6 2663

12 x 60 2 bedroom $6450
1974 Caslle 12 x 60
3
bedroom $6450 1974 Rteh
craft 14 X 70, 3 bedroom

$8900 1971 Belmont 12 X65
2 bedroom, balcony front
k1tchen, $7450 1 67 Utop1a
e x 16 campter has shower
and toil et, $1250 All pnces
on mobile homes Include
del •verv and set up Ktn
sbury Home Sates, 400 E

Maon 51 . Pomeroy 614 992
7034
For sale on land contract or
rent wtth option to buy 2
mobtle homes on separate
lots at Tycoon Lake 1 wtth
large fam1ly room, with

foreplace Call 388 8711 or'
3118 9692
•
Addoson 12~60 frailer, cen
tral aor, Addison Kyger
Creek Plant area tal1367 o
0416

'

�32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1973 12x65 two bedrooms,
new carpet, large living

room

w ith woodburner,
very good cond . Call 446

7380 .
1975 trailer for sale, un·
cterpinning, electric box

and porch, $5,400 . Ca ll 256
11&gt;50.
14)(70 mob i le home fur ·
nished , 3 bdr ., 2 bath , skir·

ting included, $9,500 . Call
614-882·8205 .
74 trailer &amp; 10 acres for sale

by owner Call 388 -9949 .
2 bedroom mobile home,
utiliti es paid, adults only,
deposit and references
requ i red . No pets. 614·992·
3647 .
12 X 40 mobile home, 1
bedroom . good condit ion .
$3500 . Phon e 614 985-4133 or
614-985 ·4395 .

1971 Oarian 12 )( 65, 3
bedrooms . 1972 Crown
Haven , 14 x 65 with 8 x 10

expando, 3 bedroom s. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
bedroom s. 1972 Nashau, 14
x 60, 1 bedrooms. 8 11• S
Sales, Inc. 2nd and Viand
Sts. Pt . P lea sant, WV .
Phone 675 4424 .

Mobile home loc ated in
Camp c onley , Extra n1ce
and c lean Phone 304·8953967 .
12x65. TOTAL electric, 304675·4087 .
74 12 x60, in Camp Conley,
air cond 1tioning, ca rpet ,
stove, good shape , 304·675·
2560.
1973 14 x 70, 3 bedroom .
675 4064 .
1960 12 &gt;C 55 trailer, 2
bed room . S3500. Phone 675 2439.
1976 MIDAS trav el trailer,
self contained , very good
cond ition , $2500 .00 304·458 1630, 458 1~52 evenings.
1966 17x55, 3 bedrooms,
52800 .00 . With lot $12,500 .00.
304 895· 3885

Houses for R.nt

4 bdr ., 1 1/ 2 bath, living
room with woodburner,
dir:ling room &amp; kitchen .
washington School distri ct .
Dep. req . Call 446·4167 alter
6PM.
For Rent With Option To
Buy ! 4 bed ., 2 112 baths,
livingroom, f amily room, 2
w .b . f i repla ces,
2-ca r
garage, city sc hools. Sec .
dep. &amp; ref. Call446·4206.
4 bdr . 2 1/2 bath bi level
With pool ott Rt. 35 Call
Wi seman Real
Estate
Age ncy . 446 3643 .
For rent 3 bdr . house with
family room, $325 . mo. Call
446·0277.
2 bdr . home in Thurman,

Oh. Completely remodeled .
Rents $175 . a month . Ref .
required . Call 379·2298 .
For rent 4 bdr . house
acros s
from
Clinic,
Gallipolis . $250. mo. plus
de p . Call446 7844 .

3 bdr., 2 baths near HMC .
Call446 2957 .
Sma ll 4 rm . &amp; bath, fur ni shed, located 735 rear Jrd
Ave., Gallipolis . $150 per
mo .• $,65 deposit . Call 446 3870 or 446~ 1340.

«

!H

I bedroom apts. available

Restaurant
equipment
reconditioned by RADCO .
Call 304-523· 1378. Hgtn .,
WVA .

at Riverside Apts . Equal
Opportunity Housing . Call
992·7721 .
Apartments. 675-5548.
Apartment, Mason, WV . 1
bedroom furn ished . No
pets. Deposit . 304· 882·3356.

APARTMENTS , mobile
homes ,
houses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614·446·8221 or 614· 245·9484 .
3 room furnished cottage,
ut i lities furnished , adults.
675·2812 or 675· 1580.

L arge house tor rent 1n
L etart Falls, Ohio. Must
have
re ferences
and
depos it. Contact Fred w.
Crow Ill, Pomeroy, Ohio,
day, te l ephone 992 -6059
night , telephone 992 · 75 11 .
2 bedroom unf urnished
$190 1 bedroom furnished
apartemnt. $125. Naylors
Run . Security deposit . Call
614·992· 2288

Ren t or sale . .:~ bedroom
brick home in Middl eport.
614·992·3457 .
3 bedroom home partially
furnished ,
depos i t
required . Available Oct . 1.
614·992 ·5694
Mobile Homes
tor Rent
2 bdr , 3 bdr .. m obile
homes . Ca/1446 -0175

FURNISHED efficiency
apartment, downtown Pt.
Pleasant. All utilities paid,
deposit required . 304 -895·
3450.

5 ROOM unfurnished apar tment, adults, no pets, call
304-675 1415
Furnished Rooms

45

SLEEP ING ROOMS and
l 1ght housekeeping apt .•
Park Central Hotel.
Rooms for rent. Call 446 1578.
Space for Rent

46

Farms for Sale

FARM HOUSE and ap·
proximately 10 acres,
mostl y ti ll able . Exc . water.
Good outbuildings. freshly
painted . new gutters &amp;
roofing .
4
bedrooms ,
modern
ki tc hen
&amp;
bathroom . Pretty setting
on private lane, near Meigs
mines . $39.000. Qhone 7422795

992 7479 .

TRAILER space 3 miles
from town junction 2 &amp; 62 at
old Y, Pt. Pleasant. 6753248 .
Trai ler spac e· L etart Rt. 2.
Ca ll 895·3526 .
Pearson Trailer Court. 2
camper lots. 675-6165.

LOT S · Real nice campsite
on Raccoon Creek, all
utilities avai tab le, $300.
down , owner w i ll finan ce,
ca l l after 3 p .m., 256-6413 .
2 tots in Ohio Valley
M emory Gardens, $600 . Ph
446· 1628
9 acres, Morgan Township,
on White Oak Rd . Has
trailer hook -up some out
buildings. tobac co base,
$7,500 . Call after 4 00 , 446 0951.
10 acres near Por t er on old
160. Idea l for home or home
sites or trailer pdrk . Rodd
frontage ,
no
down
payment.
assumab l e
morgage, low interest. 388
9060.

BY owner, 3 apartment
house on approx . 1 acre _
Live in one, rent others to
make your payment . Can
be converted single home .
City water, will consider
ldnd contract . 675 -1883 9-5
p.m .
Ph ac r es on river in H enderson, 614 -992 ·9264.

ForLease

598 I b. tobac co base for
lease and sha ll ow well
pump, S75 Ca ll 446·087l.

For rent 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
mobile home. Call446 3371.
2 bdr. mobile home i n vin cinty of Bidwell on private
lot $140. a month, $100
deposit plus utilities . 3888887 .
Three bedroom &amp; two baths
mobi le home on large
private lot . Phone 446-2676
after 6:00 PM . Deposit
required .
70x 14 new m obile home . 3
bdr., partly fur nis hed , 8
m1. from Holzer Hasp . on
north 160. Call 388·8711 or
388 9692.

3 bedroom
trailer ,
CheShire, $175, S75 deposit,
you pay ut ilities. Ca ll 614367 ·7811.
Tr ailer in Middleport New
carpet . 992 3590 after 5

FURNISHED, 2 bedroom
mobile home in New
Haven . Adults only, no
pets, 30.:1 -675 1452 or 6752996.
Trail er lots and mobile
home. Married couple only,
one sma ll child accepted.
References requ1red . 6751076

Household Goods

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa, c hair, rocker, ot·
loman, 3 tables, $500. Sola,
chair and toveseat, $275
Sofas and chairs priced
from $285 . to $795 . Tables,
$38 and up to $109 H ide· abeds,$340., queen size, S380.
Recliners, $115. to $295.,
Lamps from S18. to $65. 5
pc. difettes from S79., to
S385 . 7 pc ., $189 and up.
Wood table with 4 chairs,
S219 up to $495 . Desk SllO.
Hutches, $300. and $375.,
maple or pi ne finish .
Bedroom suites - Bassett
Oak, $675. , Bassett Cherry,
$795 . Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $250. and
up to $350. Captain's beds,
$275 . complete . Baby beds,
$99 . Mattresses or box
springs, fu ll or twin, $58.,
firm , $68. and 578. Queen
sets, S195. 5 dr . c hes ts, $49 .
4 dr . chests, $.42 . Bed
frames, $20.and $25 ., 10 gun
- Gun cabinets, $350., dinette chairs $20. and S25. Gas
or electric ranges, $295. Orthoped ic super firm , $95,
~by matresses, S25 &amp; $35,
bed frames $20, $25, &amp; $30 .
Used,
Ranges ,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bu l aville Rd.
Open 9a m to 7pm, Mon .
thru Fri. , 9am toSpm , Sat .
446·0322

44

Reatals
41

~-~

----

Houses for Rent

Small furnished house in
the ci ty , adults on l y. Call
446·0338
4 bdr . hom e, free gas heat,
2 acres, very nice, $360. a
month .
Call
446 · 3643
Wiseman Real Estate .

Apartmemt
tor Rent
--~

Furnished apts . 2 bdr .,
$230 ., util ities pa id, near
HM C, adults. Ca ll 446 ~ 4416
af ter 7PM .
2 bdr . apartment unfurn .,
in Crown City , Ohio . Call
256·6520.
3 rm. apt. ut i lities paid .
Call675·51.04 or 675·5386 .

3 bdr . home with fireplace
&amp; 1 acre, $300 . a month .
Call 446 ·3643 Wiseman Real
Estate

Unturn . 4 rm . apartment,
S250 mo., $100 dep ., utilities
pd., no children, no pets.
Ca ll 446· 3437 .

For Rent: 3 bdr. house on
Roush Lane in Cheshire .
No pets, children accepted .
Ref . and dep . req uired. :
$260. mo. Call4461527 .

Deluxe
furnished
ment centra
l air andapart·
heat,
excellent location, adults
only , lease, dep., upper
bracket. reference . 446·
0338 .

House for rent 15 min.1rom
Gallipolis on Rt. 7. Call256·
1198.
2 bdr. house unturn . i n
Eureka . $200 mo . dep. reg .
Ca ll256· 1413.
2
bedroom
cottage .
Reasonable rent. No indoor
pets. Deposit and references. Write P .O. Box 10,
Gallipolis, Oh 45631.

5 rms . house In Eureka full
size basement, fuel oil fur·
nance. Ref. &amp; dep. req . Call
2.56-6547.

New 4 rms &amp; bath, sun
deck, overlooking Racoon
Creek, adults only, no pets,
r ..asonable, Call256·6472.
2 bedroom cabin 5 min.
from ' Holzer Hoop., $200
mo. Call 379· 2565 .

3 hp two.passenger go-cart,
like few , $200. 304-895·3382.

Leather Overcoat size 38 &amp;
su it size 38, both like new .
Ca ll 304·458·1854 .
For Sale new 198 1 model
sewing machine, zig -zags,
monograms, sews on buttons, makes button holes,
darns, mends, fancy stich.
Reg . price $249 .95 now only
$99 .50. Free phone call .
Ca ll collect 1·304-736·9241 .
Whirlpool auto. washer,
$110 . Hoover portable
washer, $125 . Like new.
Ca ll446·8181 .

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers ,
refrigerators ,
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap pliances, 1918 Eastern
Ave , 446-7398 .

Bottle gas cook stove,
broil er &amp; grill, small
Hoover auto . washer both
good cond . 245-9287.
Weight bench &amp; we1ghts in
e&gt;&lt;c. cond . Ca ll 446 7048 .

Oyli mpus 01\)·10 T20 II ash,
F 1.8 l en s, 100 to 200
zo(iri'! .- Ci&gt;l14A6 4(11.l5 .

..e~tra

A lmost new Queen · ·~1-l.f
bedroom suite &amp; wheel'
chair . Ca/1446·4604 .
Lazy Boy ro cke r recliner
upholstery in 11ght blue
ve lvet . Ca/1367·0657.

2 BEDROOM apartment,
H U D accepted . 675·6722,
675·5104.

2 bedroom apartment on
Spring Ave, Pomeroy. Partially furnished . $170 you
pay utilities. Call 992· 2288
aller6 p .m.

Available . 1 bedroom apt.
for rent. Contact Village
Manor Apts., Middleport.
992-7787.

IM PR INTED advertising
specialties, all items, H .O .
"Sa m" Somerville 304·675·
3334 Pt. Pleasant . (surplus
rentai ·Arm( c lothing.)
WARDS fureplace, com·
plete with triple pipe,
mobile home approved.
Rota-ti ller with plow. 304773·5918.
SEARS steel garage door ,
9x 7, /ike new . $150.00 Phone
304-675-6133.
firewood -delivered, call
and place your order now.
304·675-6662.

55

Building Supplies

Building materials, block ,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, linte ls, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Call245·5121.
56

Pets lor Sale

POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor a1 367 ·
7220.
DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
black Chow puppies, CFA
Himalayan. Persian and
Sia mese kittens. Call 446·
3844 after 4 p .m .

Farm Equipment

Trucks for Sale

1972 GMC 7500 series truck,
Oetriot Diesel, tandem
axel. 1·614·694-7842.
1975 F ·600 1 ton Ford flat·
bed, oody rough, good
engi ne &amp; 8-25x20 tires,
asking $2,700. Call 446 ~ 2641.
8·5.

2, 16ft. BU 710 Gehl Forage
Wagons, good cond . Call
379·2601 or 379·2350 .

1979 4x4 Chew Luv truck Call 446· 2801 for termite,
AM· FM stero, topper &amp; tool roach, bird, rodent, spider,
box . Ca/1446-4944.
and fleas control. Free
_______ _____... estimates. Bill Thomas.

3 Registered American
sadd le breed mares. Call
after 6PM 256·6750.

1978 ·Ford pick ·up, 4x4, 351·
V8, PS, radio, $3,000 lirm.

Gravely with brush hog,
snow blade, chain saw,
traitor, rotatiller , rota
plow , $1.795.00 256~6582 .

175 ALL IS Chalmers, 680
hours, 304· 458 · 1885.
79 FORD 3000 diesel farm
tractor, good condition .
$3500firm 30H756052 .

19751nternational Tri ·Ax le.
238 Detriof, 13speed, good .
cond. Call2566520.

1445 Eastern Ave . 446 -4296
after 6PM .

Wallpaper,
painting,
general carpen ter work. AI
Tromm, 61H42·2328.

1981 Datsun pick-up. AC,
AM -FM,
white
spoke
wheels, 5 speed, still under
warranty . Wi l l accept an
older small truck as trade
in. 614·992·7841.

LOCKS MITH
Service.
Res idential, automotive.
Emergency service . Cawt
882 ·2079 .

1975 Dodge Ram Charger , 4
wheel drive, 46,000 miles,
$1500 . 675 ·5356.

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorol a, Quazar , and
house cal ls. Phone 576·2398
or 446·2454.

1976 Ford Cour i er pickup, 4
cy l inder, rebuilt motor.
675·6958 .

F &amp; K Tree Trimming ,
stump removaL 675-1331 .

74

F i rewood for sale. All har·
dwood, split and delivered .
Call985~ 4386.

Kitchen cabinets , P curic
range, range nood . 949·
2659

AKC Dobermans 3 month
old pups . Male 2 yrs
proven, female 2 yrs . bred
Ca ll 446 · 1562 .

1

Nice used color TV's.
Harrison's TV 9926259,276
Sycamore St. , Middleport.
Love seat, good cond. An·
t iqu e rocking crow. 614-843·
2645.

New "Energy Tech" wood
burning furna ce . Cuts your
fuel oi l or gas bill about 90
pet . Call614-985·3538 .
Living room suite. Good
cond . 742·3154 .
Antique china cabinet $.495.
Bedroom suite, co mplete
with mattress, Exc. cond.
$295 . 992·3457 .
Wurlitzer Piano, 4 months
old, $1,600. Phone 304·675·
6956.

Steam Jenny, good shape,
ask ing $1000. 576·2602.

CFA Registered F lame
Point H i malayan kittens .
Ca ll 30023·7749.
6 beeg le dogs. 2 males, 1
year ol d. 2 females, 1 vear
old. 2 females, 4 years old .
Running rabbits . $50 . ea .
614 378 ·6245.

Fish Tank and Pel Shop
2413 Jackson Ave., Pt .
Pleasant. 675· 2063 . New
hours-Man., Thurs ., &amp; Fri.
11 6. Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat . 11 ·
4.
AKC
Dachshund,
Pomeranian an Poodle
pups 304-895·3958.
New Zealand white rabbit
fryers, sold reasonable.
Phone 576~ 2754 .
Reg istered
458·1552 .

Beagle pup.

PUREBRED Austrailian
Blue Heeler puppies, 2
female, 3 months, call 304·
675·3832.
BEAGLES, Elmer Kapp.
Behind Krodel Park, Pt.
Pleasant, WV.
57

Musical
Instruments

band director .
2776 ·

Call

675-

Two Yamaha guitar's,
good cond., $75.00 each.
c a II 446· 3835.

THii ILL?EMPER/!17.

RANTS
AEJCVTHIS
!'APE!&lt;
8EII'IG
70RN···

Bundy alto saxaphone,
good cond . Call 446·4658,
$225.00.

Deford Flute. Used 2 years.
$100. 378-6221.

IT'S LAST welliCS

-

,"""'

BI'U.'f! AI.WA'tS FIN!&gt;/~ "'UI-"1 I
Z USE!&gt; FICRT OF 71&lt;/S 0&lt;.1&gt; P!IPEI&gt;
OH
MOPPEP .'!

TRUMPET &amp; stand in ex·
cellenl condjllon, $150. May
check with band director,
304-675· 2776.

Percentage Simmentat bull
breeding age. Oats &amp;
straw. 614 · 949 ~ 2822.
PIGS, purebred Durocs,
championship bloodline tor
breeding, 8 week s old, $40.
each 304·675·6662.

REGISTERED
Polled
Hereford herd bull, 5 years
old, phone 304·675·3435 .

7l._____ A
~
u~
to~t~o~r~s~a~
le~--1979 Buick Riviera. Ex .
cond ., loaded . Call 4.46-7497.
77 Mustang It, 28,000 miles .
exc. cond . Call -446·3599.
For sa le 1980 Blazer fully
equiped . 16.000 mi l es ,
$8,900. Call446·3108.

1978 DOdge Omni 4 dr ., hat·
chback, automatic, power
steering, excellent cond .
Ph. 245· 5617 after 5PM.
1980 Chevrolet Chevefte in
excellent condition. One
owner .
Low mileage .
Phone 256·6200 eVenings
only .
69 Chevrolet &amp; 2·715 tires on
Dodge wheels. Call 446·
0969.

1976 Olds 98 Regency . Sale
or trade. All power, till and
telescopic wheel , am-fm 8
track stereo, new tires,
body In good shape. Runs
good, uses no oil. Call 304·
773·5013 anytime.
1974 Dodge Dart, 318
engine, 4 dr., AC, PS, PB,
low mileage. 614·992· 5427
after 6 p .m .
1976 Lincoln Continental
Town car. Reasonable. 6U ·
992·7742.

Fruit
&amp;Vegat•bleo

Sweet pototoes, red, while,
yellow, Rober! W. Lewis,
Rt. 2, Racine, Ohio. 614-11-43·
2432,

New mopeds, last years
model, 5% over cost, 150
MPG. Ideal lor college
students. Call446·4626.
Suzuk i
750CC,
water
coo led, fully
dressed,
$1,500, firm . Call446· 1210.

1980 Suzuk i GN400X, 3,700
mi les, maroon color, exc.
cond . Call 388·9311 after
5:00 on weekdays.
1981 Harley Davidson Wide
Gl ide. $500. and take over
payments. 949-2048 .
1972 Harley Davidson, 1200
super glide. $200/l. 675·6823.

1981 Yamaha Midnight
Maxim 650 CC, b lack and
silver, 1600 miles. $2,200.
Ca ll 675·687l.
1979 HONDA, red, MR 50,
$275. Call 304·675· 1371. AI ·

ter 5, 675·6917.
75

•

Boats and
Motors for Sale

12 fl. V bottom boat, 2
decks,
storage
com partmen1 , life jackers &amp;
oars. 446·4544 call after
3:00.
16 fl. Kingfisher bass boat
with 50 hp Evinrude motor,
silver rro/1 trolling motor,
huxming depth finder
ga lvanized drive on trailer
with spare lire. $3000 . 304·
458 ·1743.
76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parrs, auto repair,
wrecker service,
buy
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. 446·7717.

78

Camping
Equipment

1 CAMPER lop lor 8ft. bed,
will trade for Dodge Ram
pickup topper, 304·576·2782.

1979 Chevy Monte Carlo,

SURPLUS JEEPS, CAR'S,
TRUCKS Car· lnv. value
$21,43 sold IQr 1100 .. For In·
·formation on purchallng
similar bargains, Call 602·
'941-8014 ' E~t·: &lt;i'796, Phone
call refundable.

81

Home
Improvements
STAN!.EY STEEMER
Carpal Cleaning

446-4208

BEIN' CIW6HE()!

WELL,OOI' AND DR TEf'ES
SHOULD 8E IN 615TRITA.
RISHTNOW!

CX&gt;P'S ll-4ERE I BuT
MIRCEA TEPF:S 15
NOWHERE IN S IGHT.'
1 ... I ~INK \A.IE'VE

LOST HIM!

NOT

WELL, I CAN'T
5AY ')01.1 t&gt;ii&gt;N'T
WARN ME THlS
MIGHT liAPPEN .

CONNIE'5MUC/f'
5TRQ-16ER TQC«&lt;YI
YO/J MAY GO IN TO

!'iEE HER NOW.

otol 1HE PAST,
;;&gt;!OAR ... EXCEPT
FOR Q-IE 1111 NG
l SIMPLY
Ml/STKNOW ...

lOR

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

11 ... 1(0NE$7'
I. PION'T!

FRIDAY

PM MAGAZINE
GOOD NEWS

COUNTRY

cJ)

Hazr:ard 0Mby. (RepHt; B0

REPORT

mina.)
cJ) NEJCT QUESTION
I1D PRtll! OF MISS J!AN

GOES

THE

8 Cii TIC T AC DOUGH
ilD MACNEIL-LEHRER
ilDI

750 and
1000 gallon
PLASTIC septic tanks.
State and County ap·
proved . Total weight 300
lbs. Haul In your pickup
truck . Ron Evans Backhoe
Service, located 3 miles
Sout h of Jackson on St. Rt.
93. 286· 5930.

(Ill

7:05 CJ)

NEWS

m MUPPET SHOW .

YOUASKEDFORIT
ANOTHeR UFE
cJl 8cJl FAIIILY F!UO
(!) HOLLYWOOD SQU.-RES
DICK CAVETT SHOW
(iD)
RICHARD SIMMONS

m
m

SHOW

DICK CAVETT SHOW

Guest· Actor JohnGielgud. Pert
IV.
lj}) . .
ENTERTAINMENT

Dozer Work . Mobile home
sites and driveways. Small
jobs a specialty . Phone 7422753.

TONIGHT
7:315 (]) BASEBALL Atla nta Braves
vi Ctncinnati Red•
7:68 (]) ~INUPOATENEWS
8:00 I ] ) . ClJ NBC MAGAZINE
WITH DAVtD BRINKLEY This

EDWARD'S Backhoe ·and
Dozer Service. Specializing
in septic tank . 675-1234.

84

cJ) II TOUCH ·

Electrical

1:10

JONES BOYS WATER
6ERVICE. Call 367· 7471 or ·
367·0591 ,

11:21
1 1:30

(JJ

-.t.

'. -

•

,ft '

'!_

'.

WAU h1IIIT WIIK

.iiff\.

MOWREY$ Uptid1$r.,
1 Bo~ 124, Pt. Pliloi~u\t o »t. ;
675-4154, ' ' - • .
•
. :·

1

•

l IN

I

(])

.

IIIIOntlfll

Ul'iiArt NIWI
TMI ·1'0HtGHf

·--:lloyoodlln..,.,'Ttlo
tlftUQQier,
.l•_nded ~heir
contrattand and BMvet •t~d
, Luoy,lllltoover 1 ct~engaln' tM

.,IV,.

'

IINIIYIILI.-·', ,

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

· ·
-

'DraoulaKaaAia•n'rCNilthe 1
Clfa.. ' 1-CI)rtot.,...,LM, '.

·111 MC!ID8110Ml1JN1
M~IIYTtd'K.,_...1
\

•'

t

I

,,

'

.

.

pltltl. '(Clotld-

gptloMd: U.S!A.) . .
r • (J) Ctc'llFICII!tl lr WMI-

t:ICI

E

(--81

DDUD

.

'

NCAAPOOftAU.i-0

111'111l.1 1UII

SATURDAY NiGHT AT
THE MOVIES
(jJ C'MON ALONG
(])
PROGRAM
UNANNOUNCED
10:00 (1) ROCK CHURCH
(!) MOVIE -(COMEDY)••• "'" Airplane" 1891
( I[) WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
Toda:r's s how wtll featur8
co~ erage ot both the WBC
world Lig ht H eavywe ight
C ham pton sl11p f tgl1t p 11ting
c h11mpion
Manhew SudMuht~mmad aaeinst Jerry
Martm. and th e irt11ugural 'F tlth
Avenue Mile' m New York C1ty.
lealurino m My of th e world'a

Cowboy Cheerleaders .
(Aepaet: 2 hra.) (Ciosad CaptlonBd; U.S.A.)

(!) BARBARA MANDRELL
AND THE MANDRELL SIS.
TEAS Ou8ala : Kenny Rogers.

Andrae Crouch. (Repeat . 60
minY

8CIJ@l WALT DISNEY

'Tho
Bug ' 19fl9 Stars · Dean
Jonea. Michele Lee .
()) MOVIE -(FANTASY) •••
"Angel On My Shoulder"
Lo~e

1846
{]]) ON BEING HUMAN Hosted
by Eric Se~ereid,thladocumen ­
tary tocuaaa on lhfl behavioral

prem iere mile rs rt~ci ng down
on e o l th e mo9 t C8 18brated
sl reets in the world. (90 mma.)

attributes of mankind . Gualla
Include Judith Blegan ol th e
Metropolitan Opera. Ella
Fltzgeret&lt;t,psychlaUIII David
Hamberg and Linua Paulino . .
chemist and Nobe l Laureale.
@Omina.)
8:06 Cil NASHVILLI ALIVE!
11:00
MARIE Guest : Andy Gibb.

ffi

A SHAUN CASSIDY

SPECIAL Actor· ainger Shaun
Cass1dy Ia JO ined by Lon I

Anderson and Jack Albertson
lor his l lfS I musical spec iaL
Shaun performs ' Tt1al 's Rock
' n' Ro ll ,' :Sfle·s Rigflt.' 'Slow

m

Down ,' and 'D a Doc Ron Ron ·
(60mm a.)

byHenriAmoldendBoblee

Untierlmt*
four Jurnbtea,
one leltll' to eiCt'laquare, to form

tour ...................

'Siepper•t8' Thla w11k two
~.Nth ot wi'IOf" married
partnera With chUdtrlt, a.tk

.t:.c:M.e

() (

I

61 N'M'tf t J

loy THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN

ACROSS

1 Encompassed I " I camera"
2 Actor, ~
Von
Sydow
l Asian river
4 Abomination
5 Was

by
5 Rustle,
as a dress
10 An African
republic
II Look
12 WWll

alliance
13 Church
orricial
14 Golfer's
concern
16 FilCh
17 Dress fabric
18 Colorado

Indian
19 Sally or Ayn
20 Son of Jacob
21 Earthen jar
23 Gush out
24 Dress fabric
Z5 Head;
chief Ill. I
t&amp; Timorese
coin
!?Dog (Fr. )
Z8 Immovable
29 Song refrain
30 Marksman
32 Kidder
film role
36 Group of nine
37 Do newsroom
• work
38 French
novelist
39 Coin

Ye-sterday's Answer
15 Skating
enclousre
17 Advancing
21) Applied
for a
retrial
21 Scholastic
sessions

mactivc
6 Female
voiWlteer
1 Meddling
8 Tyke's
vehi cl e
9 Operetta
composer
II Reduce
to powder

Z2 Italian
city

q.g

23 Embark
25 Vegetable
27 Unsullied
31 - green
33 Dean
Martin
film
34 Insect
3S Swnmer
!Fr . J

tv:-+-t-

k+-t-

inscription

t
I (J )

1-1r

,.ANIZIN

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here'a how lo work It:
AXYDLBAAXII
Ia LONGFE1. LO'II'

I SMURTI(

One letter •imply stands for another . In this sample A. q
used for the three L 's, X for the lwo O '~. &lt;'tc. Single letters
aroatrophea, the lenglh and formation of the worda are ali
hiDts. Each d1y lhe code lettN s are dilferent.

Now arrenge tht circled leners to
form the eurprlte antwer. as sug·
gHiod by 1ho obovo cartoon.

I I '( J

Prin,_,_: A"rr I IJt I I

·

1 =~ro~h. '"ow

r

(Anawarst.omorrow)
Vest•d•y·a

! Antwet': What the architect turned actor certainly
Jumbtit: JUROR

WAKEN

DROPSY

HIATUS

knew how 1o do- DRAW HOUSES

CRYPTIJQliOTES

DSK

y

J Q

YLD
DLZK

y

GXLLJL

GXHON

FKJFEK

J Q

XN

D S K XL

HKSLZ

Yeslerday'l Cryploquote: II COBWEB IS liS GOOD liS 1l!E
MIGHTIEST CABLE WHEN THERE IS NO STRAIN UPON

whM •ltepparenttng II

·-..... ·rf&gt;"CaNTHIA,.;. .
"-

•··

COLLIIII

&lt;lll ONCI UPOit A CLAHIC

IIO'IIi'n\o-· \IIIIIOCI -

.

PANT

ar,ndjta end Ramona 'Jonet.
(ftepHI; 80 mine.) ~
cJ) Cl AIIIC 'COUfiTIIY

Ta,ter, Suaa~e P ..ahette.'l) ·

; '

.

CJveete ;
·JeanltleC.AI..,,IigAIOowney.

lloiport . , . _ (I Jn:, 110

TBS

(}) II

U:JO

mese

. .BLACKWOOD

~'1.'r.:.:.:. WI!LK IHOW

CIJ•II0¥,1·•(11011110111 .. •

,

(l) ;IIIDAY IIIIGHT AT&gt; THI
M0¥111 ·eel~~r late Ttl an ·

cJ)

'( 1: Mtidt MoMiei" 1141

a ~oyage filled with enterta1n ·
ment . drama andromBncBwhen
tflePacillcPrinceaa aetaaatl on
a cruise to raise mona)' lor the
Acap ulco Orphanage. Guests
Stara : GtngerRogera , Dallas

ttiHrlng .membert 'o l t·hl
GfoaftdllnQa, ·an lmproYitll~n­
tloomeciy troup..

(D

-~

C))(il).lHE LOVE BOATU'o

ihowftpeclltL.A.' aAoxy;alap

, ' ·

...

''E••ryWhict.WayBul
lOOM" 1878

Cl) ONLOCAtlON;-fl!l
Wll HEllMAN SNOW Pool
Re'ubenllt tht oreator and star
of thla aatlr+o8i 11150'1 kiddie

YdU-IOTtlo~r 187• . .

,

.

~~ (J) MIR MAW

. Storo: ICatii!Hflhllor, -

••Y~

ftf}fl'~ fi),. ~ ll1AT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME

7:00 (]). IAIIIALI.

e .CIJ C811LA1't-'Aro .

..

C!J MOVIE · !ADVENTURE I

QU' ~ ~~ s

IYINIHG

DAV.AWIIATL,MGI

, l,tlS
{h:

NI'T. 20, tNt

.

~INTHI!P-'(

(60 mms )
O ([J (iiD CBS SATURDAY
NIGHT MOVIE 'Matt lda · 1918
S 1a rs . Elli o tt Gould , Robe II
M1tc hum .
Q;05 (]) FOOTBALLSATURDAYON

IATUI\DAY

·

~o-:1~·

~r~r~:uD~Y
NIGHT .
MOV• ·Golde• Gate ' t II t
.Stll'l: Ptfr)' Ki.•Ct. Rlo.,ard '
'UIY
1,

4:116 cJ) MISSION IMPOSSIIIU
1:30 (]) ANOTHI!R LIFIE

e·-~

(f)

'·p-?' IIHot: Alto&lt;\ R. AC!O!I, ·
' Flt'et FNtft9tll8eCurltlea, lno.

I

· ·

I!QM'eM" 1eJ4

,•

..... Sll•iii&gt;OA'111 NIWI

TR .I'STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec, Ave,, Gallipolis
446·7833or446·1833. , ·
·

" W...,e The 8uffll0 Roam''

'(••••rd•r
I)-- .ICMYiftRV)
····" .
On the Orl•"'

ltlat IItle 01n rup • email

Wtlll LOUIIIIUKIYIIfl
'PtltltY 8tookl: Tl)• De•w•r

Upholstery

4:00 (]) 700CLUB

~AiiOTHIII.._,I

'

tT'I A LIYI!III Jon i
eoftvif~Mt tl'ie glrla to ~ for. . 1

. .,.;:e
·· -.(MMot&gt;·'
10 . . . . . . .
1110

''

.

relleffronit'ft tqnnent.(Repel!!:

- MIIMHICii ~· ,ealra m6fteY

~liws

lti.WS

tt:OI

ilJllll•

4:26 cJ) fiAT PATROl.
• =•5 {)) IIOYII! ·(COIIII!DY) ••

2:30 (I) A0881AGL!.Y SHOW
3:61 (I) CIN SPORTS REPORT

:~:: (J)r~ar(JJ~.

DaVid Benner natdetoglwt him

}', •

Rodo

2:28 cJl CBN SPORTS REPORT

'Sunset Song:'Hiuveat· Chila
gi ves bir1tl to • bqy.Jitflt at war
breeka olll In Eltrope end Ewan
~na th. army . (IOmlna.)

Hulk l&gt;aHiea th.t creatu~e that
I'IOtdl ttle·aecret to the anttdot•

111!-:.•

IBEUEVE

2:05 ([) IAI1!8ALL AI!PLAY
Allanta Bravea ~• Cincinnati

' ITIIEET
•
I1D IIAIRRI'IECE THI!ATIII

TH! tNCR,DIBLE
HULK' Good var1u11 evil II The

NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone for driveways.
Call lor estimates 367· 7101

FATHI!RIIANNINQ

· ®

'TaiiVI!NtHGHI!WI
CIIN UPOAR HI!WI
10:10 cJ) , _ ~IK •IM WALL
10:21

;"rl,~~

80 mint'.) (C9ftOiuelon)
Cll!lliW-TONWIIKIN

"Pdoft" 1e1a ,
2:00 11Je NEWS
(J) 30 MINUTES WITH

bull&lt;tlng evidB nca againat J .R.;

I

10:08

haaaterriblacbnlrontatlq"wllh
hi a former li'Ue ·and cOmel .
knocking on 8tnaon'a doof.

General Hauling

t:30 .&lt; Ill•lll!wa
1:48 CD I!IIOYt/! ~(DRAMA) ••••

r•turna to' r•veal another
schema; Sue Ellen meet aDusty
aosln; Lucy mo~ea out on Mitch,
Clllf uaea Weatar 'a help in

OmlnoJ

·

etlempt to oondutt a roml'ntio
inttrlucle in hlti ~•w apartment
becomes a dllitttr wf'f':' Pete

JACK'S REFRIGERATIO·
N . air condition service.
commercial, industrial.
Phone 882· 2079 .

mlna.)

cowbova fllllhia special hour.
CCio.. d-Captloned ; U.S. A. )

··llkldlt_A='· 1110 ·
Cll&lt;lll•
Benton:•

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales 8. Service. Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 992· 2284.

Camea . (90

rhyrMatorgrownups,andcr~zy

(J) MoV.tE l (COMED'O ..... ,

&amp; Refrigeration

.

·,

Ia Kim

12:51 11J CIIN IPORTS REPORT
1:00 (J)
WAAREN ROBERTS
PRUINTI

(Bepeat; 60 mini.)
(JJ SOUNDSTAGE 'Shel
Si lvetaleln ud Dr . Hook '
Mar~eioua ma4neaa , nuraery

rtportundprolll e~. Ho,•IOavld

Brinkley ia joint.~ bv comrltlut·
lng reporters Garri'Ck Utley, .
Ja~k .~erklna . pougtu,Kiker
and Betty Aaron. (60 mlna.)

gueet

J.R ; eonaulte 1 lawyer about
cuetody ot John Ron; and
Rebecca and Clill meat at leal.

weekly series oflent a blend ot
currant newlatoriu.topleel

BACKHOE and Septic tank
Service.
Larry Siden ·
Stricker . 675 -5580.

(J) FMIDAYI Tanlght'amutiCII

BRODIE ' MarY MacGregor '
Miu Brodi8tekel Mary
MacGregor, ·a tocial outcaat.
u11der her wing , leaving the
other Qf fll surprised ancl
conf\lled. (60 mini )
8:30 (!) MOVIE -fDAAMAJ•• "The
Pilot" 1$80
cJ) POWER GAME
10:00 • (J) (JI} DALLAS Kfietin

11J8

illl

12:30 (])
•
Cll
TOMORROW.COABl•TO.COAST

win the J.O Hogg Firat Annual

CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

7 :30

muaical gulntla Kim Cernu
(90mlna .)

(R•i!!•!ii oro.)
ct llJ Ulll THe DUKES OF

HAZZARD 11'1 Duke va. Cuke..
Bo and luke compete agalnat
each other and Rotco to try and

POP

&lt;DJa FRIDAYS Toni~»hl·a

ement home by stealing a train
end having one l. .t lllng at lila

(1} INSIDE THE NFL
(j)
ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT

&lt;lJ

(I) ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
Anchored by Ted Koppel.

plan to escape from a ratir·

ill8
I1J

12:00 I1J ROSS IAGL.!Y SI&lt;OW

citizens follow an aging rebel's

EVENING

Excavating

.

:5HE. SAIPL07.S
OF TliE G IRLS

AS APWESIVE

11:35 (I) IIOYII! ~(WEITI.RN) • \AI
"Shelako" 1118

Never· 1979 Stars : Harold
Gould , Harry Morgan, Don'a ld
Pleasance . A group of sen ior

S!PT. 2&amp;, 1gs1

Will do small repair jobs.
Plumbing,
painting ,
paneling, ceilings, siding.
10 yrs. experience. 9927546 .

t

MODELS AT

AtARINKA's...
USING IT.1

Evening television listings--------7:00

,f

ONE Of' 1HE

POI;sN'T llilrAJN·
HER-'

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

I

I GOT IT FR&lt;.: '1

JUST 10 NlAKE
SiRE WINNIE

Plumbing

87

!JUT IT'S
/MPtJH7;4Nr
THAT I. KNOW
IF I 'M TO HELP
YOU TURN YOUR
LIFE AROUND.'

l'tAt&gt;7El? •••

&amp; Heating

85

THE PRUG BILLY
FOUNP IN yOUR
APARTMENl .WHERE
I&gt;ID YOU GET IT?
I'M GOING
10 STICK A5
CLOSE TO CONNIE

Y- YES, !JUT l
NEVER~P

Painting. I nterior-Exterior . Small carpenter work ,
Odd jobs. Free estimates.
675·6219.

83

lii!r-.,-.,,-.

1HAT -COQ&gt;.INE
THA'T 51LLY FOUNP
'Ill YOUR LAVAl~ WAs;N'T IT!A~i"-

Stark's Tree Trimming. In
sured . 304-576·1010.

82

MI.J friend. Rover, isle- t! ·,
-=-.. . . 1 m.st
.
sef him
sc .'el~
h .me!

You think
'lectric I•nm·"
a sof' couch wn~1-r:
it's down this
is allow on! .---::7-:' street?·~~~

does !.lOUr
house
look
like?

he~ ao

1111 steering, am·fm stereo.

114,700.; 1974 Chevy Monte
BUNDY trombone, 5 years Carlo, 8 track, am·fm
old, $150. Pl. Pleasant band radio, $1,000.; 2 electric
jacket &amp; shirt, $.1. Phone baseboard heaters S75. 992·
304-675·5646.
· 5967 alter 4.
58

Mororc~cles

YOU GAW
TH05E 5rlllfr

I lllh·•+

Reg i stered
Pol l ed
Hereford bu l l. 3 years ol d .
)750 . 614·985 ·3891.

Reg1stered Quarter Horses
for sale. Quality show hor ses. boarding &amp; training.
Dan or Karen Beam ,
Gallipolis. 446·0183.

R.I6HT~

7160.

Used R ·40 Ditch Witch
Tren c her . 614 ·694· 7842 .

Livestock

-THE ICE IG Cl.051N'
IH ON UG I l'E'~E

,..THE FOOTPR.1NTS
THAT ~ERE Al!l)JT
Sit lfCJIES ()EEP?
IN THE ICE?!
NOT P06SIIJLE,

French City
Painting
Residential, commercial,
interior, exterior, paper
hanging, and
~xured
ceilings . Ph. 367· 7784 or 367 ·

1970 Vol kswagen Van, new
tires, good cond. Call 675 ~
6866.

63

AND THEY
L&gt;I6AWEARED

Home building, home
remodeling and repair.
Custom work from start to
linish . Call388· 871l.

John Deere 3300 combine .
Massie Ferguson 300 combine . New ldea-2 row
picker, Oliver 2 row picker .
New Idea 1 row picker .
Super M Farm all and 2 row
mounted pi c ker . Russ
Brothers Farm Machinery .
St . Rt . 139, 6 miles South of
Jackson . Call286·2731.

Heavy Dutv 4x7 uti/ ity
trailer , $200.00. Call 446 74 13.

SIS.TER~!

VI~IT.

ANNIE!

Jumbo Bobwhite Quail, 1
week old to adult sizes .
(6 14)985· 4345.

They'll Do It Every Time

-·

61

A

FERRELL's
WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Home
maintainance
and
remodeling.
Phone 388 9326.

Jeanie's Pet Shop Rt. 1.:11,
west of Ga lli polis. 446· 7920.
Special Fancy and Angora
hamsters, $2 .00 each .

HILLCREST KENNEL
Board1ng all breeds, c lean
indoor-outdoor facilities .
Also AKC Reg . Dober·
mans. Ca ll 446· 7795.

~--:-=-::-.:.:::-===:.:::::J..::=========:.~ cond.,
Trumpet
stand,
exc.
SlSO.&amp;May
check with

LOO M,&lt;I$Q;&gt;N '

1979 Mustang Ghia, 4 cyl.
sun roof, silver, AC, low
mileage, $5,300. Call 675·
4480ext. 71 or675· 4528.

379 ~ 2593 .

in. cu t riding
mower . 882 ·3242 .

WESTINGHOUSE air
compressor, twin cyl. 1
motor, 3HP, 220·440 volts, 3
phase. Large receiver
tank, never used . $700. 304·
576· 2782.

34a. 140RW.ALJoo: A\'£ .,
8UFo;.ILO, N·¥·

4210.

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

lawn

36

WHIRLPOOL dryer, ex ·
ce llent condition, used very
little . S60 . 30.4 675·3214.

EXI"tAANS
7/IE 1?4CTS···

WRECKED Nova 304·675·

72

IDiAi, IIROOKi,VN
!XIfT9 ONL~ IIJ
'fOUR~~

1n A UTOPIA
WE HAVE HE~E,
8ROTHEil,;. ANO

WEATHERALL
CDN ·
CRETE · quality and ser ~
vice, call675· 1582 .

For sa le Jersey Bull Ca lf
200 250 lbs . Will sell
reasonable . Cal/379-2609 or

B inch table saw . Call 6754004.

7HEN-WIFEY

6321.

NO DOIJIT ASO.UT
IT, Tit!! AUI'HORITtE5
SHOULO PA~ OI!AR .
ailCrHelt LAOIURT

NO. 'IOU WANT'
A PLAtE WHERe
Ltfl'l! 1!1 eooo. THI&amp;

WOODSHOP
Cabinets,
picnic
tables,
porch
swings, most wood produc ts . 101 Court St., Gallipolis .
Call 446· 2572.

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and groom ing .
AKC
Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Spaniels .
Cal l 446·4191.

------

Log splitter. 882 3242 .

1 room furnished eft . with
bath, utilities included in
Rio Grande. Calll-682-7056.
3 rm. &amp; bath, furn ., no pets,
dep. &amp; fer . req . Call 446·
1519.

300 gallon fuel oil tank with
hand pump, $80 . 304· 576 ~
2782.

77 Monte Carlo, loaded,
yigh mil eage, new radials,
$1,000 or will trade for 4·
wheel -drive pi cku p of
equivalent value. 304 -675·

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haflelt Brotners custom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Call-446·2107 .

1977 Chevy pickup, 305 ·Dave's Appliance Repair .
engine, ps," pb, "automatic, Wa shers, dryers, plum bing, electric, genera l han·
$2495 .00 . Phone 675· 3054.
dyman . Phone 304· 576·2921
or 675·5689.
61 FORD pickup, phone
304-57 6· 2592.
RINGLES'S SERVICE ~ ex
perienced mason, roofer,
73
vans&amp;4W . D.
carpe nter,
electrician,
and
Diese l Scout, 4·wheel drive general repairs
pickup, 22,000 actual mites . remodeling. Phone 3~- 675 ·
2088 or 675· 4560.
Call446·2957.

Twenty gauge 4' x8', 4'&gt;&lt;12'
metal sheets won't rust,
many uses, home, out·
building, etc.; 4'x8' , $5.50 ;
4'x l2', $7 .60 eac h. Tuppers
Plains, Ohio. 614-667-3085or
614-667 3074.

House hold Furniture Kif ·
chen table &amp; c hairs, bdr .
suit , end tables, lamps,
c hairs, sofa , roll -a·way
bed, 8. b&amp;w TV . 446·3444 .

SOFA bed, good condi tion ,
$50.00, 304· 675·6773 .

WOODBURNING Franklin
Stove, used very little, $75 .
304·882·3202 .

STUCCO PLASTERING
te&gt;&lt;tured eel 1/ngs, commercial and residential,
free estimates. Call 2561182 .

PAINTING
interior and
exterior,
plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling .
20 yrs. exp. Call388·9652.

1979 Camero. 675· 6335.

.TG@Y,

Mobile home in c ity central
air and heat, adults only,
dep. 446·0338.

1979 VW RABBIT , lots of
extras, 304·675· 1226.

580 B Case Hoe. 6430012 .

King wood and coal ·
woodburne . For mar m·
formation please call after
6:00PM, 256·6078 .

51
Lots &amp; Acreage

JS

79 OLDS Cutlass Supreme,
loaded, 304 · 675 ~ 4087 .

SURPLUS JEEPS, CARS ,
and TRUCKS available.
Many sell under $200! Call
312·742· 1143 Ext . 3940for in·
forma tion on how to pur·
chase.

Trailer space tor rent on
Bulaville Rd. Call446·8048.

CO UNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33, North at
Pomeroy . Large lois. Call

MORRISON' S Auto sales.
Henderson, WV . Phone 67 5~
1574 or 675 ·2881 .
1972 Volkeswagen, 675· 2864
or 882· 29·47 .

I

Home
1mprovements

81

Auto for Sale

71

Squires B ingham 22 L .R.
ammo $1.19 per box . Ec lipse 12 gage game loades, 6
shot, 20 shells per oox S3.95 .
Spring Valley Trading Co.,
Spring Valley Plaza, 4468025.

30 sq. yds . used carpet, $80.
The Shoe Cafe, 300 Second
Ave. Gallipolis. Phone 446·
4222 .

49
N 1ce turn . 2 bdr . trailer on
Bob McCormick Rd . Dep .
r eq, $185 mo. plus uti l ities,
water paid Call446 ·4491 af·
ter 5

~~e£:(~
1~ ~lh\1~ 1•

New wOOdburn ing furnace
heats large house, still in
factory carton . ~ - Call
256· 1216.

Modern office suite tor
ren t, downtown. Business
and Professional Building .
Call or see Morris Haskins .

42

JJ

CAR!&gt;{~~~~~

2 BEDROOM apartment in
Pt . Pleasant . Deposit &amp;
references,
1·614 -263-8322
or 263· 2669 .

---~

Furni shed house in Middleport . Refer ences &amp;
depos it required . 992 ·1606
or 992 ·2917.

Misc. Merchandice
by Larry Wright
Ratliff Pools &amp; Servlce. lr--------------...;;__~-~.,
Complete sales, service,
pool covers. and win terization kits. call446·1324

Apartmaml
for Rent
Modern 1 bdr . apt . lease &amp;
security deposit required .
$155 monthly . Call-4462055.

IT.-H.W. BEECHER

··.

'

�" '

Page-12- The Dai ly Sentin e l

Friday, September 25, 1911

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Housing grants available Meigs County happenings
The Village of Middleport has
been selected by the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) to be one of
a select few communities to
receive Block Grant Fuuds to
provide housing rehabilitation
grants to low and moderateincome residents. Grants of up to
$9,500 may be made for home
repairs. Grant funds ma y be used
to solve the following problems:
- A r e your wa t er or drain
pi pes leaking, p l ugged
or

corroded?
- Do you often blow fu ses or
have you no t iced frayed wi r ing in
the basement a long t he f loor
joi sts?
- Are your foundation walls
bu lging or lea n i ng?
- Does y ou r r oof l eak? Ha s it
caused cei l i ng da m age?
- Is you r heati ng sys tem old or
d oes
if
h eat
your
rooms
unevt'n ly?
- Is you r house protected by
adequ ate in sul a t ion , stor m win
dow s, or weath er st ri ppin g t o
co nse r ve ene rg y?
Are th er e other r epairs
r equired to th e exi sti ng struc t u r e
th a t wou ld i mpr ove the ap ·

peara nce to make your hom e
more livable?

The two areas within the
village that have been designated
by HUD as eligible for owners
and renters to receive home
rehabilitation grants are the
southwest portion of the village
between Locust Street and the
river and the northern part of the
village bounded on the east by
North Second Avenue, on the
south by Hudson Street, on the
north by the corporation line and
on the west by the corporation
line.
Due to limited funds. residents
who are within the income guidelines and have a home
rehabilitation need, should contact the Middleport Office of
Community Development at
Village Hall , 237 Race St. ,
Tuesday through Friday between
8 a .m. and 4:30 p.m . Phone 992.3145 or stop in and pick up an applica tion at the Office of Community Development.

Area deaths
O scar L. Cain
Osca r L Ca m, 79. lltdwell-Hodney
Road , f"the r of Gall ia County
Pro'"cuting Attorney J oseph L.
Ca in , died Wednesday at hi s residence.

Born Aprtl 6. 1902. in Buffa lo,
W.Va., son of the late An drew and
Honmt Knapp Cain, he was a rightof·way engineer for Chesapeake and

Potomac Telephone Co. and a memb&lt;&gt;r of the Southwestern Local Boa rd
of Educa tion for eight years.
He mar ri ed Ma ry Edith Scherer
on Dec. 28. 1929, in Cha•·leston ,
W.Va ., and she preceded hun in
death in Ma y 1978.
Surviv ing are t hree sons, Robe rt

of Goldsboro. N.C .. Kenneth uf Lake
Park , Fla . and Joseph of Gallipolis;
three da ughters, Mrs. F red i Ida 1
Mtllcr of Orient, Mrs. Russell
1

Patrici a l Sa unders of Scottown a nd

Mary Evelyn Cain of Seattle, Wash .;
a sister, Mrs. Floyd (Virginia 1 Hill
of Wooster ; and 11 grandchildren.
Funeral services wil l iJ&lt;&gt; held at I
p.m. Sunday tn the Warehune
Funeral Hurne , with the Rev.
Wtlliam Myers offi ciatin g. Burial
will be in Haven of Rest Ga rdens,

Poca. W.Va.
A prayer servtce will iJ&lt;&gt; held at 8
p.m. Sdturday in the fun era l horne
and wtll be followed by Masonic services. Fr iends may ca ll at the
funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Saturday .

Rulwrl R. Lt·wi"
Rob&lt;&gt;rt R. Lewis, 53, clled Thursday at hi s South Second Ave.
residence tn Middleport.
A veteran of the Korean Cnnnict ,

Mr. Lewis was born Aug. 6, 1928 in
Middleport. " son of the late Clarence anll Sadi e Crites Le wi s. He was
also preceded in death by his wife,
Alta Ann Perry Lewi s.
S u rvi v i n ~ a re a son, Ronald L.
1-&lt;'wi s, West Jefferson : a daughter.
Mrs. Ginge r Ann Coza n, Colwn bus ,

The village will assist ln Wllnl
out applications, Inspection of the
structure, preparing a list of
work needed, selection of an acceptable contractor, preparation
of all contracts and agreements
with contnctors, make Inspections of work in progress,
hold all grant money in escrow
until a final inspection is made
and give technical assistance.
Income limits for var ious sized
households are shown below to
determine program eligibility.
Number in Household and In·
come are listed :

1, $9,738 ; 2, Sll,130; 3, $12,520 ;
4, $13,912 ; 5, SU, 782 ; 6, $15,651 ; 7,
$16.521 ; 8 or more, $17,390.
Off i cials stressed t ha t only t he
two area designated by HUD are
el igible for these funds .
In order to be cons idered for
t he first
round
of
these
r ehabil i tation
grants,
ap ·
pli cations must be i n fl'le Offi ce of
Commun ity D~velopment by Oc t
9. Appli cations received after this
date w i ll be considered at a later
date .
An
application
form
is
avai lable on Page five of tod ay ' s
paper if you wish to mail i n your
application

·r No

Lewis Allen McCarty
Graveside rites for Lewis Allen

McCarty, stillborn son of Mary and
Joseph McCarty. Middleport, who
died at the Holzer Medical Center
Wednesday will be held at 12 noon
Saturday at the Pratts Fork
Cemetery .
Besides his parents, the infant is
survived by his maternal grandmother, Ruth M. Smith. Middleport;
paternal grandmother, Olga McCarty , Gallipolis; a brother,Keith
Allen McCarty, at home, and several
nieces a nd nephews. Preceding him
in death were an infant sister, his
paternal grandfather, Oscar James
McCa rty, and his maternal grandfather , Le wi s J . Smith.
Offi ciating at the servtces will be
the Rev. O'Dell Manley. The Ewing
Funera l Holl'e is in charge of
a rra ngem ents . The re a re no calling
hours.

Reminder given

Sarah Gibbs, deputy registrar of
motor vehciles for Meigs County,
reminds persons with the last initial
of N, 0, and Q, that their license
plates exptre at midnight Sept. 30.

W

To obtain new stickers persons
must have certificate of tltla and
registration. Also, if they wish to obtain a license sticker for someone
other than the person whose nam ? is
on the title they must stop for a
power of attorney form that must be
signed by the owner,
If the title is in both names the
power of attorney form must be
signed by the person who is unable to
stop in at the office of motor
vehicles.
The license bureau located on
Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy, is open on
Friday eveings from 5:30 p.m. to 7
p.m. and Saturday morning until
noon to accomodate the public .

Office hours set
Office hours at the Leading Creek
Conservancy District Rural Water
are from 8:30a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and
12 :30 p.m. to 4:30p.m. daily Monday
through Friday it was announced
today.

Marriage license

Larry Wright, Rt. 1, Langsville
and Wands L. Wright, Rt. 1,
Langsville filed for dissolution of
marriage in Meigs County Conunon
Pleas Court

A marriage llcense wasluued to
Uoyd Wllllam Miller, Jr., 27, Ocean~de, and Irene Lois Barnes, 27,
Langsville.

Easten1 downs Frontier, C-2
page

r·~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~=~~;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1

II

D-1

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL'·&amp;
SAVE THIS WEEKEND ON
• Boys' Corduroy Jeans • Men's Corduroy
Jeans • Douglas Marc Slacks • Children's
Winter Coats • Men's Flannel Shirts • Men's
Sweaters.
And Many Other Items

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

IF=========================~

Blitzkrieg hits Meigs, B-1

•

uttba
1/ol. 15 No . 33
Copyrighted 1981

tmts

Middleport- Pomeroy- Gallipolis- Point Pleasant ·

.

,.

.

SERVED Wlni:

Choice of Salad, Roll &amp; Beverage
DINING ROOM ONLY

'2'5
~•••••~m===============================••

CHOW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

PRICES TUMBLE - Tradlag Is brisk on Door of
die New York Slodl EacllaDCe Frlday,just four seconds before the dose. But stocll: prices were dowo, wilh
die Dow J011e1 !Ddulrlalaverage- wbkb decUned by

Local em e rgency units answered
a number of calls Thursday, the
Metgs County Emergency Medical
Service reports.
They include: Middleport Unit,
11 12 p.m., Norman Terrell, treated
at his Beech St. home ; Pomeroy,
6: 56p.m., Alice Osborne from Sumncr Road to Veterans Memorial
Hospital ; Rutland, 2:28a .m., Ronnie
Zirkle from Meigs Mine I to Holzer
Medical Center; 5:03 p.m., Wilbur
Smith from Depot St. to Holzer
Medica l Center; 7:48p.m ., George
Cozart from Meigs Mine I to
O'Bicness Hospital. Athens; Tuppers Plains, 12 :36 p.m. Agnes Hill
from Arbaugh Addition in Tuppers
Plains to Camden Clark Hospital ,
Parkersburg; 6:12 p.m. Harley
Koenig . from residence on Route 7 to

about 20 pei'C!eat slnee
- loslDg 11.13 poluts to
close at8U.Ol. Boad prices aleo plunged, a sign of Wall
Street's pessimistic view of the admlolslnltioo's
budgetplaus. (AP Laserpbolol.

News briefs
Thomas leaves money to society
GREENVIILE, Ohio - Broadcast journalist Lowell Thomas, who
died Aug. 29 at his home in Pawling, N.Y., has left $50,000 in his will to
the Darke County Historical Society.
The bequest waa made public this week after the society's officials
received a copy of his will, filed in Dutchess County, New York.
Thomaa, born in the Darke County town of Woodington, frequently
visited his hometown and the Garst Musuem In Greenville. The
litU!jeum, run by the historical society, houses a large collection of the
broadcaster's memorabilia.
·
Thomas died at the age of 89.

Construction worker dies at dam

Vderans Memorial.

PORTSMOUTH, Ohio- A construction worker was killed when the
construction vehicle he was operating overturned near the Greenup
Dam oo the Ohio River.
Sheriff's deputies in Scioto County identified the worker as Larry
Adkins of South Point. He was pronounced dead Fridsy at Mercy
Hospltalln Portsmouth.
Adkins, 43, wa$ employed by Union Boiler Co.• which is building a
new hydroelectric generator at the dam.

Margaret Saurers. Jl.ldy l.ew1s, all
of Columbus, and Belly Philli ps,
Plain City .
There i:l re no ca lli ng hours.
liravestdc rites will be held at 11 :30
a.m. Monday at Sunset Cemetery in
Columbus with the Raw ltngs-CoatsBlower Funeral Home in charge of

Senate confirms Dolibois
WASHINGTON - The Senate confirmed Friday by voice vote John
E. Dolibois of Ohio as ambassador to Luxembourg.
DoUbois, of Oxford, Ohio, but born in Europe, served as an interrogator of high-ranking Nazi officials at Nuremberg. He continued
his work with Luxembourg through the eatabllslvnent of Miami
University's European Center in that country.

arrar1gem e nts.

Issues .ha%11rdous waste permits

THE

CENTER

COLUMBUS, Ohio - ' The Hazardous Waste Facility Approval
Board has Issued permits to 59 hazardous-waste storage, treatment
and disposal faclllties in Ohio.
The permits, Issued Thursday, bring to 199 the number of facilities
approved for operation by the.board.
The board still lias 175 appUcations to consider before an Oct. 9
deadline, when operating facllltles must have board permits or be shut
down.

Confract .gra~ted for plant
PIKETON, Ohio- A North Carolina steel company baa received an
$8.4 milllon conlrJict to furnish and erect steel for a proceas building at
the U.S. Deputment of Energy's Portianouth Gas ·eentrlfuge Enrich-

Amid oil the confusion surrounding Tax-Free Savings Certificates, it's no wonder people have
been jumping ot the first so coiled "good deal" to c&lt;ime along. Well. before yoli do, consider
this. While everyone else has been screaming about their certtflcotes, we at Central Trust hove
been quietly sitting back getting all the facts straight. And noW we're ready to shcire them with
you. For complete details on our new Tax -Free Savings Certificate, stop by your nearest Central
Trust.offlcetoday. When you really think about it, .isn't i.t ironic ·
many times ,
clarify can come out of confusion? This time.
·
·
however, it happens to be the financial center
that's helping yq...~ see the big picture.

..

ment planl The bid by Peden Steel Co. of Raleigh, N.C., waa among
ell!ht rei:elved on erecting ·tb8 bullcllnll.
(continued on M)
Until.....,

GALLIPOLIS - The tense
situation that exists in Gallia County
law enforcement as the sheriff's
department employees' strike enters its sixth day todsy was brought
home to one area businessman
following an early Saturday morning incident in Rodney.
Sheriff James Montgomery said a
subject was taken into custody and
put in the Jackson County jail after
reportedly being found prowling
around Elliott's Wrecker Service
and Garage on Jackson Pike.
The name of the subject was
withheld because charges are pen-

j.).

By KEVIN KELLY
Tlmes-Seatluel Staff
GALIJPOUS - "The price is
right, the need is there, and the kids
of the next 3 generations need the
same support we got when we were
kids."
With those words, Gallia County
Local Schools Supt. Gary Toothaker
summed up the hopes of those
seeking passage of a 3.7-mill bond
issue Tuesday.
Purpose of the bond issue, which
will generate an estimated
$13,049,000, ·is for the construction
and renovation of the district's
elementary schools.
This week's vote will be the second
time this year the issue w)ll have appeared on the ballot. The "fitst Issue,
set at 3.5 mills, was defeated, 1,1781,041, in en April28 special election.
"It's never going to . get any
cheaper," Toothaker .said. "People
agree we need elementaz;y schoolswe clearly need elementary schools.
In spite of budget cuts and an antitax atmosphere, the problem has to
be solved by local folks."
U ,P@Ied, tlljl m~y,raised from
the sale of bonds will lillow for the
conatructlon·of a new acflooliD the
S01,1ihwestern ·allen~~ ~•.
replacing C&amp;dmus and Centerville
,,~d ne'l' bullitlnge \II the Vln\01) and

Bidwell-Potter areas. ,

·
Other lmprovemenlll wilt be ad-

And ~
. '~and new .faclltjea · lt· ~

. ·· ditiQIII to ' Addavllle

'!)'ace,

.

MEMBER ; FDIC

1"

Stork t•rirP.'i tumbled, romnwdity prirt•.~t fell ,. ,hnrt•ly and
bond price.• declined on IJ all Str~rd IM the nation '.llil finanrial
community RptJHrently found littb~ to rheer uboul itl IJreNidenl
Reag. 1 '• IHIP•I hudgel-rurting pi11m. 'fh.- U.m· )one• in dwtrial aa&gt;erlll(e plunged 11 .3/'"ints to 824..01 , its luwt•stlt•vt•l
since rhe .•prinl! of 1980. Tht• Americ11n Stork Exrhnnw• ·, k"Y
indt X marked it.... ."'econd·lllrl(e~l clt•din e "" rProrrl. Tlu•
df'r·linf' wn.• lh&lt;' lule•l in a slump rhal lhHf h11.• frrrub[,.,{ lhr'
mRrlt·et Hll.'l'ummt,r.

Meanwhile, the president's budget
advisers said the new round of cuts
will require further reductions in
Medicaid, Medi care , federal
retirement and other benefit
programs.
Howev er, the admini stration
backed off regulations to reduce the
minimum portions in the milli ons of
school lunches ser'ed across the
country. Budget director Dav id A.
Stockman told reporters Friday that
proposal was "a bureaucratic goof
(Continued on A-4)

Market Analysis
Dow Jones
30 Industrials

Sept 21 -25-12.18
High

846.

Low 824.01
Closed 824.01

860840-

1

820-

ding, Montgomery explained.
According to Wayne Elliott, the
garage owner, one of his employees
spotted the subject near the garage
around 12:45 a.m , and called for
assistance from the sheriff's department.
Chief Deputy Bob Hartenbach, the
only non-striking employee on duty
at the time, informed the employee
there was no one available to detain
the subject.
Since the strike began last
Tuesday, the department, staffed
only by Montgomery, his wife and
Hartenbach, has been answering

only emergency calls.
Elliott arrived on the scene and
with the employee held the subject.
The employee was able to flag down
Bob Donnally, a Rio Grande village
marshal, while Donnally was
headed home.
Donnally was informed on what
happened and called the Gallipolis
Post of the state highway patrol for
assistance. Donnally and a trooper
held the sulj:ect while another call
was put into the sheriff's office.
According to the Ga IIi polis City
Police log, at 1:01 a.m. Hartenbach
infonned Donnally and the trooper

Donnally was a special deputy and
could handle the situation.
Donnally informed Hartenbach he
was not a special deputy, and
checked with Gary Wallace, another
Rio Grande marshal, and Rio Grande Mayor Marlin Wedemeyer on the
problem.
Wedemeyer confirmed Donnally's
status as a village marshal with no
jurisdiction in the county. Wallace
advised Donnally to call Montgomery directly. At I : 15 a.m., Montgomery was reported on his way.
The subject was picked up and then
taken to Jackson.

V&lt;:lters will decide fate of county system's
plan for school construction, renovation

e~ 111e

of pprtable

.OCIII. there. 'r
'
.
• "'DIIft :II a. definite need," ae-

j

' 'I'm going to go by the phone calls
and telegrams that have been
coming in stnce last night's speech,
and they are running three or four to
one and better in our favor he said.
On Capitol Hill, House Speaker
Thomas P. O'Neill J r. , D-Mass., said
" there's no question in my mind"
that Reagan would have tremendous
problems getting the latest cuts
through Congress.
Republican leaders said Congress
" almost certainly" will cut the
defense budget next year by more
than the $2 billion recommended by
the president. But House Republican
Leader Robert H. Michel of Illinois
said a proposal from liberal GOP
members to slash $9 billion from
defense spending goes too far .

First strike related incident occurs :
B &amp; E in progress goes unanswered

cl
.

save our RC, RC-100, Nehi, Upper.JO, Diet Rite
and Dad's Root Beer bottle caps for charity.

10 Section s, 88 Pages. 35 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. ~ews,aper

Sunday, Sept. 27, 1981

1

POMEROY, OHIO

Enwrgt&gt;ncy runs

FIRST,
FOR·
TAX-FREE

ttdittt

WASHINGTON (AP ) The
Reagan administration's plan for
additional budget cuts is receiving a
cool reception on Capitol Hill and
Wall Street, but the president says
he isn't worried because he has the
public's support.
The stock market hit a 16-month
low Friday as the Dow Jones
average of 30 industrial stocks fell
11.13 points. But President Reagan
said he wasn't bothered by the
falling prices "because I don't have
any (stocki ."
As to why the market was down ,
Reagan said, "I don't know , but it
started yesterdsy ... and I guess it's
continuing on down. I don't know
what the reason is, but I'm sure not
going to take the blame. "

SPAGHETTI DINNER

PH. 992·5432

I

'

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

228 W. MAIN

in E-section

Wall Street disagrees

',

and four sist e rs . Lo uise Propat ,

I

E-section: business, farm

Take-One insert

Reagaf!, says public supports budget cuts

EVERY MONDAY NIGHT AT

one injured

The Meigs County Sheriff's Departrnent investigated a bicycle-jeep
acctdent Thursday at 3:15 p.m. in
Racine . No personal injuries were
reported .
According to the sheriffs department Harold Bird, 9, Racine, was
riding a bicycle west on Pearl Street
when he ran into the side of a vehicle
traveling north on Third Street
driven by Glenn Rizer, Racine. It
was reported that the younster did
not stop at a stop sign.
Thursday the sheriff's department
received a complaint from Lesley
Gibbs, SR 124. Cooks Gap Hill that
an object was thrown from an eastbound vehicle which broke the windshield of his vehicle that was
parked on his property. The incident
is under investigation.

To end marriage

!lordlnll to the Rev. Jerry Neal of the

~ln&amp;anla~~
.
••a,
Y!llmdw fltPI!IIallen Worldnll ~iD­

of tilt SOld 011 Sdlooll

ee July firr the bond~-

1

. "Nobod,y woilld di!ll1 1n GaUla

~ ~ ·~ ~~~~ lclloo~'' ~
/.. .

.

'.

."'

added.
Supporters are being cautious on
chances the bond issue will pass, but
those interviewed felt their work in
the last two months has been fi·uit-

lui.

" We don't feel we 've lost any supporters, we' re building on what we
have," Neal said.
The committee has been going

door-to-door in the district, speaking
at parent-teacher meetings and
pasSing out flyers at football games
to bring the matter home to voters.
(Continued on A-4)

Woman cares for goose
HARRISON, Ohio (AP) Mildred Morrison doesn't know
exactly why she goes every day
to a park to feed "Ducky," a
large white goose with an affinity
for red cars and people and a
hatred of other geese.
"Isn't this the craziest thing• I
guess I just feel sorry for him,"
said Mrs. Morrison, who drives
two ·miles daily to MiamiWhitewater Forrest.
She was at the park last week
when a woman drove up in a red
car to the shelter house and dumped the large goose in the lake.
He didn't like II. He hopped out
and ran to the car, but the unidentified woman wouldn't let him
back lB.
Mrs. Morrison was curious and
struck up a convel'lllltioo.
"I ·uked her how she could
raise him for four months and
just tum · him loose," Mrs.
Morrllon said. "She said she was
lloinc to Europe and her children,
the )'011118~ waa 18, didn't want
to tete care of him, so she
broilaht lilirt to die 1111rk where
tbel'e are a lot of geeae."
.Since then, eVery dsy, the
gOOie spehds an bla time near
any 1"111 car be can find 1n the lot.
"He won't go
the water, and
he won~t !lave lliytblng to do with
the other geese,
So, Mn. Morrllon feedl him.
She eVe!l
water from

near

w-

Life is just 'Ducky'

Mildred Morrlaoo feedl &amp;laeky, a wblle g - left ID a park by a
wbo Ia vacatloalDg ID Europe. Dady woa't bave liiiJih1uc to do
with tile o!Hr geese or eat die park food. He CIIIIIPII by red cara boplag
It's biB owaer. Mrs. MorriiGD feedl blm every day because 1be feels
sorry for blm. (AP La&amp;erplloto l.
·

park.

home.

"The other dsy, one of the
rangers - Lowell Garrett asked me what this was all about,
and I ~ld him," she said. "He
was gla!l the mystery was
unraveled because be (Ducky)
c811npsll!lder a red car
by

at !,lie

"He'uloner. Yesterdlly ail the .
gl!ele came up to

him, but he .

wouldn't have anything to
·
. do
. With
' .

them. I'd been feedlnl!, bim
bread, bilt now I give him a
·balanced diet with eamJtl

lettuee.

,,

lind '
'

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            <elementText elementTextId="45888">
              <text>September 25, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="474">
      <name>cain</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="54">
      <name>lewis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="51">
      <name>mccarty</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
