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•

Economic trend shows definite recession

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open oal\'1

WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S.
economy slide backwards at an annual rate of 0.6 percent in the JulySeptember quarter, the goverrunent
reported today in the clearest signal
yet of national recasion.
·
The Commerce Department
report said inflation-adjosted gross
national product - the broadest
measure of American economic activity- fell for the second quarter in
a row, having deClined at a rate of
1.6 per&lt;:ent in the April-June period.
Those tWo coru;ecutive .declines
meet the most common benchmark
for deciding when a merely sluggish
economy has sll~ into genuine
recession, a period 1characterized•by
production C\ltba~, worker layoff~
and slow or falling sales totals.
One month ago, 1 department of·
ficials had estimated a 0.5 percent
rate of decline ;for the thenunfinished third qliarter, but many
.
'

_.. a'/ ,.6
'\4)-9. SUI""

'

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analysts had expected the drop to be
Murray Weidenbaum, chainnan hard Urnes. He says that the soluUon
Rising consumer prices for food
S')mewhat larger in Ught of recently and services were singled out as a of the president's Council of to our~ is to go even further
fading factory production and rising cause tn the report.
Economic Advisers, said that with the cuts."
unemployment.
"Real," or inllaUon-adjusted, although a new recession probably
Reagan and his advisers are
President . Reagan himself GNP rose at a robost annual rate of has arrived, Reagan's policies proposing additional budget and laJ:
declared last weekend that the 8.6 percent tn the January-March would bring the United States out of leglalation, but they still contend
f
economy appeared to have fallen in- qUarter before decUning in the April- it
their program as enacted will do
to "a slight :.. and I hope a short June period.
But HOUBe Speaker Thomas P. much toward reviving the national
The new report aaid that before O'Neill charged Tuesday that the economy by early next year. ·
recession." He and his adviaers
have blamed the downturn on adjosting for Inflationary effects, president had "changed his tune" on
In reinarks to a group of business
problems inherited from former GNP rose 8.8 percent to an 811Dual the economy.
leaders, Weidenhaum said that "in
PreSident Carter, but pollti~al foes rate of ~.96 trillion tn the third quarReagan
promised !hat past administrations, the tendency
ter, which ended Sept. !II. That tran- congressional passage of his about this time has been to go for the
have lllamed Reagan.
AS the economy cools down in a slates toto, fl .51 trillion in 1972 economic program would bring "a panic button" by pressing for
recession, Inflation also tends to fall, dollars, which are used as a yar- new renaissance in America," emergency spending increases and
but the new Commerce report in- dstick to help discount for recent in- O'Neill said. "That renaissance Is looser Federal Reserve Board connow being given a new label trol of the money supply.
dicated that welcome side effect Is flation .
,The GNP report comes a day after . recession."
not occurring.
"Those misguided policies are
precisely the type of actions that lie
The GNP implicit price deflator- the Commerce Department aaid
A few months ago, he said,
a broad inflation measure linked to consumer spending declined in Sep- Reagan was celebrating his at the ""!.t of t&lt;1dity's dee1&gt;-seated,
national output - rose at an annlJ!II lember, ending a string of increases congressional victories on budget . long-run economic problems," he
rate of 9.4 percent, compared with that many economilrts felt had been and tax PJts.
said.
.
6.4 percent in the second quarter and . propping up an otherwise-weak · Now, O'Neill said, "Ronald
On Tuesdas, the Commerce
economy.
9:6 percent in the first quarter.
Reagan tells us that we are in lor Department reported that personal

•

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. sat.Sa\e

_.. -ull·• '"" .

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, Octo~er 21, 1981

THE ·W

AND

17
OUr Reg.

4A1-4.97

NANuET, N.Y. ..., Anned bandits robbed an armored truck
Tuesday, killing a Brillk's guard, and later killed two police officers in
a shootout a lew miles away, authorities said.
Paul Adler, a Nyack·Hospital spokesman, confirmed the deaths and
said another police officer and two other Brink's guards were injured
in the incident.
:
Four sospects, including two women, were taken· into custody,
authorities aaid. Police llaid two other suspects were still at large.

I

Auto slump ~ds johiess claims
COLUMBUS, Ohio - ,A slump in the auto industry contributed io
more than 4,000 of the 26!171 initial jobless claims filed tn,Ohio ,during
' the 'Week ending Oct. 10, accotdlng to the state Employment Services. '
The agency's admiJitstl'ator, Albert G. Giles, sind Tuesday that the
number of initial claims f!)ed was up 7.~ percent from the week endlilg

'

Our ~A7 1Y J~ III?Oii CO. '·
......... Splderman! Batman." Dukes
of Hazzard:'" SUperman~ .... Eo.. 3.18
#-,

_....

\

OUr uti -wodd Of ltlaatlerry
lmal4-6 .
11u1um•10
a.-.-12·14

.......

Not Allltylelln

lhortcelle.',.Strawberry, Apple
[).mpllng, Apricot. Lemon .. Ea .. Ul

Our 4A7 llleollon Of lla atu

OOIIumiL Witch. Draculct

vampire
and werewolf are Included. Eo.. U1

all programs was reported for the week of Oct. 10, up 2.8 percent from
the previoos week, he aaidl

Cer~mony

.

Recall made 1on had roast beef

will open
new bridge ·

WASHINGTON - Roast beef ~ted of containing a food
poisoning organism is Aow being recalled in seven stale.:&gt;, the
Agriculture Department says.
.
The department had ,announced last Thursday that State National
Provision Inc. of Albany, 1'1· Y., was voluntarily recalling its roast beef
from wholeaalers and retailers in New York, New Jersey, Coor
nectic91, Masaachusetts arid Rhode Island. · ,
Tuesdily the recall was extended to Vermont and New Hampshire,
the department said.

The celebratiOI) marking the
opening of the bridge linking Raven·
swood with Meigs County bas been
set for Saturday, Oct. 31.
The West Virginia Department of
Highwaya announced Tueaday that
tile $18 million bridge would be completed and ready lor traffic on
Friday, Oct. 30.
However, DOH spokesman Gary
Chernenko stressed that while the
bridge would· be completed on that
date, the official opening of traffic
use on the span would be geared to
ceremonies planned here.
Currentiy the Ravenswood Chamber of Commerce Is planning several
activities to mark that event, including a ribbon-cutting ceremony
and a dignitaries luncheon.
Any civic groups or organizations
. interested in participating in bridge
day acUvities are urged to contact
Paul QuaJls in care of The Raven·
swood News.

Winning Ohio lottery number •
CLEVELAND - The wi!lntng. number drawn Tuoisday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 683.
The lottery reported earnings of f5;14,586 on the drawing. The ear·
ninga came on sales of f881,376.50, while holders of winning tickets are
entitled to share $34£,791.50, lottery officials said.

Weaunerforec*st

•

Mostly cloudy.tonight. Low$ in the mid-408. Cloudy with a chance of
rain Thursday. Highs in the la.w to mi~. Chance or rain l~ petcent
tonight and 30 percent Thur¢ay. Winds southwesterly 16-20 mph
tonight.
~
. •
Extend¥ Oblo Forecast
' FrldllythrougbSuuday:
·
Cbauce of sbowen Friday ~th saow flurries possible north. Fair
SalllnJay and 8 ebanee af lbOW"f'' Suaday. Higbo in the 4GB f'iiday IIJid
Salllrday and In the mld-108 to the mld-411 Sunday. Lows In the 2111 aad
~ow•.

Pa~es

15 Cen1s

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

. prepar~ and. ~. 'lilhln •
week.
~·-.;. ............ - ,..-·.~
Also · meeting with the cOm·
missioners was Phil Roberts, county
engineer' who diacussed various
(Continued on page 14)

~3~ttmated 181,436 cJima.for ~ployment compenaation under
i

2 Sections, 14

Bob First, county soil conservationist, met with COW!ty commissioners Tueaday to discuss the
inclusion of Meigs County in the
Buckeye Hills Resource Con· ·
servation and Development ( RC&amp;D)
project area
Firat reviewed projects in which
Meigs County could make application for federal funding. The
projects reviewed were aedimentation tn ditches along county and
township roads; recreation . area;
transportation, better roads to the
new Ravenswodd Br(dge; environmental, el&lt;Jl8nsion of water
systems in the county.
First said an application could be

aandits kill guard, policemen

1

Indostries sensitive to this year's
high interest rates have been doing
poorly all along, but the weakness .
now has apparently spread through
touch of the economy. Unemployment, another key sign of
recession, has been increasing, and
administration economists predict it
will rise even higher in coming mon~
ths.

Discuss
. county's
inclusion

Too~v
•••

.

Other government reports
released in recent days showed use
of U.S. factories falling and builders
cutting back even further on new
housing construction, which already
was near a record low.

•

at Y· ·e nttne

Voi,JO,No.llJ
Copyrighted 1981

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triUion.

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income rose 0.8 percent to a
seasonally adjosted annual rate of
$2.46 trillion tn September. But personal consumption spending, which
had also been rising in recent months, deetined about 0.1 percent to $1.9

I

•

AWARDs - Melp Comity Farm Bureau officen
and cbairmeo received slate awards at the BDDual
Melp C01111ty Farm Bureau meeting Tuesday olgbt in
Chester. Pictured &amp;nl a..ted, I tor, Martha Gearhart,
Kingston, state trustee for the Southeut Dl.strlct; Mn.

Maida Mora, pa!t president; Rex Slleoelleld, wllb
plaque. president; Golden Canaday, Gatlla County,

slate trui.tee for Athens, Gallia, Meigs and Lawrence
CIMIDiies; steading, I to r, Tom Hamm, membership
c&amp;-ehairman; Norman WUI, public affairs chairman;
Bob Burdette, membership co-chairman, and
Catherine Colwell, women's activities chairman. The
group received pins.
I

Order two Pt. Pleasant
pharmacists be reinstated
II

Two Point Pleasant phannacists

sospended from the state Medicaid
Program by the West Virginia
Department of Wellare over a year
ago have been ordered reinstated by
Mason County Circuit Court Judge
Clarence Watt.
Watt's order hullifies a ruling
made July 30, 1980, by Welfare CQmmissioner Leon Ginsberg which
blocked William Hockenberry, pharmacist and owner of Hockenberry
Pharmacy North ·and David
Morgan, a pharmacist .there, from
filling prescriptions Jor Medicaid
recipients. Watt issued his order
reinstating · both Hockenberry and
Morgan on Monday after lawyers
and representatives for the welfare
department failed to appear lor an
appeal hearing.
According to
Raymond G. MUBIInl\le, attomey lor
the phannaclats, the department
also had failed to fUe legal papers in
connection with the hearing.
· The pharamcists were suspended
from the program last year alter

being accosed by the Welfare Depar· wanted to made them seem/'
tment's medical services unit of Hockenberry said today. "We also
filling prescriptions with ·generic appreciate the tremendou.s support
drugs but billing Medicaid recipien- we have received from the public
ts for expensive brand-name drugs.
throughout this ordeal," he added.
West Virginia law provides thst
Hockenberry operated two phar·
pharmacists must fill prescriptions macies in Point Pleasant at that
with generic equivilents when time but one, Hockenberry Town
available, unless brand-name ,drugs Pharmacy, has since gone out of
are specified by the physician, ac- business.
cording to Hockenberry.
Ginsberg upheld the suspensions
Throughout the welfare depart- during an administrative hearing
ment's Investigation, which ll!d to a July 30 of this year. The phar·
criminal Indictment by the Mason macists then filed an appeal in
County Grand Jury which was later Mason County Circuit Court and a ·
dropped as well as to their suspenhearing was set for Mondy.
sion from the Medicaid Program, . Watt's decision, according to
HOC)(enberry and Morgan have Musgrave, means the suspensions
maintained that while they did nn are cancelled unless a further court
certain prescriptions for welfare ruling is made in the case.
recipients with generic drugs they
In the order filed yeoterday reincharged the wellare department stating. the pharmacists, Musgrave
only for those drugs and not the also asked that the court consider a
brand-named ones. ·
· motion to force Ginsberg and the
"We appreciate that the court saw welfare department to pay all court
things the way they were instead of costs and lawyers feels billed to the
the way the Department of Welfare
phannacists.

Bad weather,
conditions could.
.
·delay opening of student center
.

RIO GRANDE - The weather·

work all winter inside and we should
by around August.
However, If the weather doesn't
cooperate we'll be delayed quite a

man could dictate how soon the Rio be in the facillty
Grande Ct&gt;llege and Conununlty

, Collet!e Student • Conununity Center
opens In 1982.
"We've beeh pleased with the
progreas of tbe structure so far,"
said Dr. Paul C. Hayes, President of
Rio Grande. "What we need 'now Is

leW tflld fe dial W
W h -w-u•atlllaJIIIIIIe IP 14111111
... U
faelhr wlddl will -tile Ollila,
Melp, ,.._ad~_.,_ r''''lll So
dleileiML'l'llec /"flllnldtt.,..IDAipll.

1111 wllllr

...........

ewlt,...IMwwbll

=

II

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good -~ so thai the
worken can get the brick work
lini.sbed.

"If we can get two more weeks of
pod weatber then we can get the
brick up and they can get the roof on .
Once they pi the niol oa !hey can

bit."
The structure will serve the.

student populaUon by providing
dining, study and recreational
facillliea, 1!f18~ for continuing
education )li'OIIr8lliS, and house the
offices for atudent health and
student development.
. Additionally, the 211,000 aquarefool center wtll rcconunodate the
fOUI'COWity (Meiga, Gatua, Jackson.

Vinton) Community Educational
Center as well as a Ukounty Model
Project on Aging on serving 56,000
senior citizens.
The project, when completed, will
he one of eight buildings that have
been constructed on the campus since 1965. Six others have undergone
remodeling during that span.
The latest additions to the campus
were the E. E. Davia Technical
Careers Center that wu fonnrlly
dedicated ba lbe fall of 111'111 and the
Fine ilnd Performing Arts Center
waa dedicated in the winter of 1981.

�•

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Wednesday, October 21. 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Commentary

•
•

.Yankees take lead in World Series

Pag~2-The DallY Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Olllo
wednesday, October21,1911

•

' ,NEW YORK (AP) ,..- Home run
thunder and defensive brilliance, a
lamlllar recipe they've used before,
have given the New York Yankees
the jump on the Los Angeles

]ames ]. Kilpatrick'

.Once more at code.revisi.~n---.____:___ _.;_____-----:_,_____
'
Senate and Thomas N. Kindness,
R- present code provides 16 d!Herent
Ohlo, in the House - have sought to maxlmUill tenna for crimes; at lwt
eilminate most of the Individual sec- 14 different levels of lilies may he
tions that caused great coiltroversy imposed; crimes ' are vaguely
in the past. The issue of capital classified In 65 to 75 catesorlea
punishment has been severed. A bearing only a "chaotic and Insuspiciously br01d pl"l)';ision for the consistent" relationship to each
offense of "endangerment" also has other. As one consequence, the
punishments lmpooed by federal
been omitted. Inded, in their effort
to avoid a fight, this year's sponsors judges often vary widely. A defenmay have taken out too much: They dant convicted of auto theft may get
have sidelined provisions many con- five years here; an substantlaUy
servatives had hoped to see, limiting · identical evidence, another defenapplication of the exclusionary rule dant may get off with one year.
The pending billa place their flt'st
on the admissibility of evidence.
•
emphasis simply upon clarification
Given a legislative problem so , a consistency. In some areas It Is
massive, it is impossible to draft a ~ to extend federal jurisdicbill that wotild win universal ap- tion - for example, to the crime of
proval. The pending Senate bill runs large-scale arson corrunltted for
to 425 pages, the quite similar House profit. The Senate bill would create
bill to 466 pages. Both measures un- the first federal statute on burglary.
dertske to rewrite virtually the Another new offense would aHect
whole of the Crimin.iol Code- a code leaders of organized crime. There
that has grown erratically over the would be mandatory sentences of
imprisonment for anyone convicted
past 200 years.
The existing hodgepodge cries out of trafficlting In heroin, or of using a
for attention. As the national com- gun or a bomb in a federal offense.
Spokesmen for the American Civil
mission pointed out 10 years ago, the
Liberties Union have complained
that the Senate bill is too tough. The
bill wotild penni! federal judges for
the
first time I(! deny pretrial
"
i
release on bail to violent·offenders
found to pose a danger to the community. Such a provision makes sense to me. Another provlsiOJI will
make it more clifticult for violent
Alter eight months of holding an enthralled Congress in the pabn of his
hand, President Reagan appears to be losing his grip In both the House and
teen-a~~Fra -loltelclil)!t punishment.
the Senate.
Virtually all of the president's mounting difficulties on Capitol HiU are attributable to members of his own party - Republicans who solidly supported Reagan earlier in the year but now are openly critical of his policies.
In a little-noticed but highly significant vote in the House recently, 39
Republicans defected from the Reagan administration's position on an issue
· WASHINGTON (AP) - Political
." of major importance to the White House- reductions in federal spending for
detectives looking clues to which
domestic social programs.
In the Senate, GOP corrunlttee chairmen are publicly opposing the Democrat might be the next to turn
Republican got no help from Rep.
president oli issues the White House has placed atop its political agenda including budget refonn, tax code revision and the sale of anns to Saudi Ronald Mottl of Ohio.
Mottl was listed among several
Arabia.
The House vote overwhelmingly rebuffing the president attracted little at- conservative Democrals being
tention because it occurred on the same day Egyptian President Anwar wooed by the White House and
Republican cllllgressional leaders
: · Sadat was assassinated and was obscured by events in the Middle East.
after
Rep. Eugene Atkinson of PenThe effort to reorder Reagan's budget priorities is being led by two lnnsylvania
announced his switch to
Ouentlal Republicans - Sen. Pete V. Domenici, R·N.M., chairman of the
the
GOP
last
week.
·• Senate Budget Committee, and Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield, R-ore., chairman 'lf
So
Mottl
took
to the House fioor to
the Senate Appropriations Corrunlttee.
deny he was considering a change.
"To end any future speculation on
WASHINGTON - A pleasant
prospect is beginning to emerge on
Capitol IIIli. It Is quite possible - It
may even be probable - that
Congrea at Jut wi1! get around to
adopting an amnibus bill for refonn
of the Federal Criminal Code.
Such a bill has been a long time
comng. Ten years have passed since
:the National CIJIIIIIlission on Refonn
. of Federal CrlrnlnaJ Laws brought
forth its comprehensive recommendations. · The 93rd Congress,
overwhelmed by Watergate, had no
time for code refonn. The 94th
Congrea worked on the famous (or
: Infamous) Senate Bill I, but aban, doned Its efforts under heavy fire
from left and right. In 1977 came the
bill known as Son of S.l, which actually passed the Senate only to die
In the House. A grandson of S.l came
out of the two judiciary corrunlttees
to late in 1910 to receive floor consideration.
Now we are looking at the greatgrandson of S.l, and it looks
promising. The principal"s(JOilliOrsStrom Thurmond, R.S.C., in the

Beca11110

rDO.t viOlent P1me

is the
work of such juwnlles, this section
alsomakea senae tome.
After too many years In which too
much concern has been directed
toward the accused crimlnal, the
pending bill filr the first time reflects a concern
. ·., for the victim. Fines

are not quite so brfchlln
the HOUIII!, wlierti John Conyen Jr.,
Pnll)leda

paid by offenders would go Into a
speCial fund to comjlenaate victims
of violent crime. The Idea has great
~rit.
.
The Reagan admlnistratiilll has
thrown its weight ·behind code
reform. The Senate seems likely to
paso Its bill early next year.

D-1tlli:b., cllalrman of the criminal
justice IIUbcommlttee, "'JPP IU the
whOle omalbul approach. But even
In the House,IUpport Is growing. By
spring or early summer, a 11)-year
task may be done.
I

aob

FOlLOW '111ROUGH - New York Ylllkeee llager
Watson
foilowa througb with Ills 1wlq as he watcbea bls flnt ,iaDIDg three-nm
homer bead •t tp.lhe opelbiJ game of the World Series TUesday Dlght In
New York~ Watson's homer off LOs Angeles Dodg.,.. pitcher Jerry Reuss
gave lbe Yaakees the early lead. New ·von won tbe pme, 54. (AP
Laserplloto)

GOP rebels on
Capitol Hill

:] ~ Letter to the editor

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Democratic haunches (Jeffersonian
·style) and tell us all about
·"Robinhood in Reverse."
Gayle Price
Portland, Ohio

·: · Reverse Rohinhood

•

h;

this matter, I wish to set the record he and his guest, Masao Horie, had
straight and tell you that I am very been ·In New Guinea during World
proud to, be a Democrat and 1will War II, fighting on opposite sites.
remain a Democrat," he declared.
BemeU told the Japanete official
Then he promptly walked to the . he was glad the two hadn't met
Republican side of the chamber and before on a one-to-one hasis. If they
sat down.
had, he exj)lained, "one of us might
In the small-world deparlment: notbeheretoday."
Rep. Charles E. Bennett, D-Fia.,
Sen. Arlen • Specter, R-Pa.,
recently had a member of the receiving a rhyming Jetter from a
Japanese Parliament in his office + constituent, Mildred Prince d
and the two found they had more In Philadelphia.
common that the U.S ..Japanese
"I can't sing, I won't play if the
defense issues that pnimpted the 'Reps.' touch my Social Security or
visit.
take it away," the Jetter said. "Our
_B,ennett said itturned ou\ that both

Back homiisupport changes

'

I

voices are ·LOUD, our vote'• a big
thing. Will it he tears or Jada, Jada,
Jlng, ·Jing?"
Specter wrote back: "So111_5where,
over the ledger people live, Those
who've worked all their llVOII and
gave what they had to give.
Somewhere, past the Supply Side
where ol' folks flee, To reatout llleir
•goldenyeara'onSocta!Security."
Well, Specter told Ma. Prince, "II
may not make the Top 40, but I hope
that you like It + althougb I ezpect
you will prefer my vote to retain
Social Security benefits."
.

P~oxmire

Prol011ire dropped his campaign budget-cutting drive, the dairy inWASHINGTON (AP)- Even the pusheditpast$1trillion.
The electric utility companies
most vigilant of congressional senUnW Monday he used every tactic on Monday and agreed to a com· . dustry was denied an lncreaae In
·: seem to he a favorite target of certinels
against
government
exit
took
to block action on a bill to roll promise. So the bonus was tem· price supports that would have COlli
:; : tain conswner grouP!' and other actravagance
can
and
often
do
back
an
wlintended Increase in porary, but nonetheless costly.
about $147 million. UnW then, sup:: · tivtsts. But it looks to me like they
He
said
the
higher
levels
were
change
roles
when
the
spending
at
dairy
price
supports.
.
port
levels had been automatically
: · : ride those companies for aU they are
It
is
about
time
that
some
of
these
issue
is
crucial
to
\he
people
back
·
The
tempofl!ry
tncteue
went
Into
eosentiallest
thousands
of
dairy
faradjusted
every six months. Congress
:: worth for the advantags they might
s&lt;H!alled
government
beaefits
be cut home. ·
'
effect
Oct.
1,
the
start
of
the
governgo out of business. But the cut approved that cosl-cuttlng measure.
mers
·: · be ~ble to get and not just to help
.,
. out. There is no incentive left in .
In the case of Democratic Sen. mont's new boc*keeping year. So for was Inevitable, and he settled for an
.: pool people.
people
today
to
get
out
and
make
William
Proxmire,
back
home
is
19
days,
~
support
level
was
$13.49
agreement
that
could
bring
an
In,. . Those companies are owned by
crease in support levels on Oct. 1,
' But it was .temporary, on the
Wis&lt;."Onsln - . da!i-y country. Prox- per hundred pclllnds;'ilp from $13.10.
:: -: millions of investors (60 percent of something of themselves.
But then again, why should there mire is the semltbr wlio bestows a
The exaCt ~o'st · of ·ihat !Dcrease 1982. The alternative was to rilk•ap- · premise that- before the Oct. 1 in;: : the stock of electrical utilities is
be when it is easier to let the govern- sardonic "Golden Fleece Award" won't be known unW all the bills proval of a formula that wotild crease came dUe, "Coogrese would
:: . owned by people over 60. years of
;. age) and the only way they will ever ment and taxpayers take care of every month to 'call attention to currie In at the end of the month. Tile freeze support levels for the next have passed an overall farm bill lneluding a revised dairy pricewasteful (ederal spending. He•aJso Agriculture Department's own . three years.
:: . realize even a part of their equity is you.
I'm
sure
that
Mrs.
lambert
and
talked
all'bight
against
an
Increase
estimates•
·•varied
widely,
''from
'
The
controversy
dates
to
April•!,
•
,IIIIJli)Ort program. The !ann bill .
·: · when their estates are settled.
family are finding it a diffctilt in the federal cjebt ceiling that .$3)0,000 to $400,000 a day.
' when, 8J part of President Reagan's hasn't passed yet.
activists are part of her
period to make . ends meet, but
,
.,· ·.. theAnti-utility
anti-business attitude prevalent
everyone L&lt; feeling the same
~.; in this country.
'' .· The money the utilities have
•· . available to distribute to its
: ·: shareholders is first taxed by Uncle
CHICAGO (NEA) _ Before Aug. sy~m 1s' hanclltJ7g
striking at the Cbicago Air Route
As bad as things an! around
Sam. Then the stockholder Is taxed holders to support their family.
Even
if
it
means
one
work
a
day
job
he
•M
t
Ill
t
11
heduled
fligh'dall
red
Traffic Control Center in Aurora, Chicago, they are much worse in the
again· on the same money by the and one a night job·· so that the 3• w n 11 •""' a1r- 1"!1 c con ro ers sc
I"
Y as compa
began the strike tho Jed to their with 14,000 a year ago and even lll.; about 45 miles south of Chicago. Northeast, whre more takeoffs and
same Uncle. The state then takes
children always have a parent there firingbythe'Reaganadminlstration, ·though.fao' lewe.. ·non-scheduled lind . The center Is responsible for ,the landings take place within a amaller
•: five percent of what's left.
.
• Delta- and all of the other airlines private Bircraft are using .major radar tracking of planes flying i~ an area llll&lt;tpben!,&amp;:higher pefCOnlaiJe
.. In 1979, the Conununity Services · for supervision. ·
There are jobs advertised every
li ed
t the d
lalalrports
, airs
. pace of about 1110,000 square of controllers went on strike.
Administration (CSA) had about $18 night
in the !\"per. It might not - genera11Y v up o
a · commerc
.
.
For example, 172 controllers used
'
million left to help poor people with always be the job you viant or the verti$lg claims of being "ready
Why are there so many delays? miles. Before the strike, the facility
to
work at the control center that
their fuel blli&amp;.,Legal aid lawYOfS in- best paying but you cannot be when you are." But these days you The numbers tell the atoiJ'·
was staffed by 490 fully quaUfied
handl,es
traffic for the New York
duced eight indlgents to file suits choosy when you have five young have to be ready when the air-traffic
The nation's bulliell airport has controllers and 1110 trainees. Today
control
system
can
accept
the
plsne
traditlllliallybeiii'Cblc!IF'sO'U.re.
there
are
120
controller,
inclllding
• against CSA. The judge who heard
metropolitan area. All but four ef
" ngc the ~ ,_.,.~ers staffed ::the former supervlsora, IIOIHtriklng them went on strike and were fired.
'
the suit directed the lawyera to work ones-\ofeedandclothe. It takes guts, • on which You• .a_.,m~.
out a plan to distribute the money to hard work and some Incentive to be ., chances are that your llight will be airport's coatrol tower and ra_clar controllers, military personnel and Now the center Is &amp;taffed by just 46
someone, but it can be done. I do delayed.
room; 85 of them were fired for employeeswhoarequatifledonlyfor controllers. Takeoff delays of 10
needy people.
believe
that
if
two
people
are
responThe
Reagan
administration
is
striking.
Now the airport has just 54 lower-level duties.
The lawyers prl1pCllled to divide the
minutes are not unconunon these
sible
enough
to
bear
five
children
proud
of
the
way
jt
has
coped
with
,
controllers,
whose ralll!s Include
A year ago the' 410 controllers at days during peak periods at New
money among .J.irtous grouP!' IJI.
cladlng anti-utility groups and with then they should have the incentive the strike by the "Professional Air sapervtson, retirees, military per- the center handled about 1.,,000 York's La Guardia Airport.
the CSA itself to hire more lawyers. to work hard at whatever job they Traffic - Controllers Organizaiton. 101111el and nOIHtriklng controllers "flight operations" a month - or
The Transpo"'·""-·"'~-t - .........
, __.....__.
• - eo&amp;eaiWI"I
•-- • ' In the . aboul375each· ~worked ..
Each of the indigents, the plaintiffs, cangrabandmakeitwork.
· - • ..,._.,....w,~•
, ....,M...,
_..,.hour . The FAA recently announced
Prest"denI Rea gan, "tis not
As
to
es
· press re•·•·J.. _,__~ dalrly
...._,_
~
"'
,
'
.
weeks
bol
t
11
houn
got $250 each. The judge reversed his fault the welfare system Is all
. _ ""'"""
•
spen
Y ve
a another 5 percent cutbadlln air traf·"'
his decision. but it was too late.
emphasizing ·h"1".~Y platies are ·
A·re.r aco O'Hare han!Jled about day In front of thelt radar screens. fie; this reduction may tutn out to be
It ha ha
ed
eaaed
up.
s ppen over a flying and how .Jtfitr travel has 2,400 takeoffs and landings a day; Today the 120 contronen at the cen- even higher for the more crowded
Come on you scheming liberal ' m
politicians and entrenched period of years. He Is only trying to remained. But for \inore and more today ·.il!at IIIUIIber has fallen to ter put IIi silt 10-hour days a week.• airports of the Northeut. this
airline passengers, long delays and abouii,II!IO. But delays are common They handle aboilt 1311,000 flight sh!Juld reUeve the delavo t o - e•. ·: · bureaucrats sitting llrOijlld on 'your clean it up, not take fathers away·
1·
CheriStsnforth missedcomectionshavebecomethe despite
cuthlc:U. Before the operations a month; that averages tent.
'" -·- A
,------------------Ru:::;tland:::::~0~hi:ii"- ruleratherthantheexceptlon.
strlke~l'tii1Wnr41orlandlllg 'about 1,1110 each, or three times Buttheexpertspolnt·out,thatthe
.,,
The Federal Aviation Adm· at O'Hare wery ~~ now they IIIDI'I!thanayearago.
busy airports have not yat exi
•,
nistration teports that delayed arespaee(alloul!lvendRutesapart. ' Thecentarlalllidtobecompletaly peilemcedanybad-ther.'l'heairflights averaged 358 a day natlnauy O'HareooptrolleniQ crft the record tied up for about 3D mi•tt• ever)' trama ayatem eouJd lll"l'llllleetl to
..
during a recent two-week period;
that ~ deiQII' are CCIIIIIIDII lifter.-. while the conlrGJien haD- shamblee once the-' winter ......
'
,lhat contrasts with an average of Ill and that arivale llilat.lr)'lnc to t.lte die tra-uneniU !llgiJta ~ , lhlarri¥e.
,'.
a day for the same period a year off at O'Rue In tilt late ~ their alrlpace. No pial* are _ So, It II likely that the~
ago. This i11creaM has occurred mJcbiJta.-towllt~houn.
aUDIMII to take off or lallll y1 · be eva~ leu ready w1B
ueln
.,'·
even through' the~lc control · 1'111 4 '' ' 1 Itt" '..-a more ~llrparl&amp;durinalhif~ ·· ll!emantbaahaad;
· ·
••.
~
. -~
•
.

Support yourself

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•

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o-

The Daily Sentinel .

.

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r

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•..'.'
•,

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ROBERT L. WINGE'IT

........
..... _
.__-at",.--.
.
.
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....., .. _________ -·--Put.lil!ter

PAT WHITEHEAD

The SVAC's two unbeaten teams, homecoming victory over ~
Eastern and North Gallla, continue western, last season's co-champ.
their quest for the loop chamP. G. Riffe, Eastern's sure-banded
pionship this week prior to a big Oct. receiver, got the scoring underway
30 clash at Eastern.
with a 78 yard punt return In the
Coach Archie Rose's Eagles, 7-o, opening stanza.
will travel to Hannan Trace while
Senior quarterback Mike Bissell
,, Coach John Blake's Pirates heist got Eastem!s second TD with 51
., · Southern. '
seconds left In the half on a 10 yard
Southweatern visits Kyger Creek . run. In the third period, Bissell got
in the other league.matchup.
his second six pointer then Greg Cole
Last Friday night, Eastern con- ad!fed another score.
tinued to roll with a 32-0 . In the fourth canto, Joun Reibel,

-.~. Bamberger
NEW YORK (AP) - Is George
Bamberger a soft-spoken sort in• , clined ..to be a cheerleader on the
~ .bench, as he says he is? Or is he il
strict disciplinarian who Jets you
know who's boss, as described by his
new boss, Frank Cashen?
• , The . truth probably Ues
. somewhere between these two ex·::, tremes. And It will be up to the New
.,• YorkMets' players whether they are
managed by Bambi or the Beast.
"They probably will find they are
playing for the easiest Individual
" , they ever met," Bamberger said
,; TUesday at a news conference to an. nounce his appointment as the Mets'
"" ninth manager. "As long as they
•· don't· take kindness for ·weakness,
.. .. they will be all right."
-·
That final sentence mlly have been
a subtle warning !of the Mets, who
have been known to play far below
- ezpectations in recent summers.
• • Bamberger brings a winning,
record as inajor-league coach and
manager to the job left vacant when
,, . Joe Torre was fired 011 the final day
: · · of the regular season.

fieltl lllruclt out, Lou Piniella hit a
ground nile double to right. That
brought up Watson, who suspected
that wl\11 firllt base .open, Dodger
Manager Tommy Lasorda might not
let left-hander Jerry Reuss pitch to
him. EspeclaJiy with Nettles, a left·
banded batter, on deck.
"In that situation, in the first' Inning, I'm not going to put lim on to
get to a left-handed hitter like Net- ·
ties, who may hit the ball out with
that llhort porch, .. said Lasorda.
So, Watson hit one out Instead.
"My knees were shaking and there
were butterflies like I dreamed
comparison. .
there would be," said Watson as he
Bob Lemon, the phiiOIOphl~ man stepped to the plate for his first
who lllllJl8808 the Yankeea, remem- World Series swing after 17 years asbers how Nettles' glove torpedoed a professional baseball player. "I
the Dodgers in 1978, the last time can attest! was nervous."
these two teams met In the fall
The count went to 1-2 aod then
classic.
Watson drilled a shot to the opposite
"You'd think," he noted, ~ "they'd field, dropping it over the fence
leam not to hit the ball down there." about375 feet from home plate. ·
They keep trying lim, though. ,
"It was a fastball away and he just ·
Nettles set the defensive tone for hit It to the best part of the park,"
the game with a diving stop on said Reuss.
leadoff batter Davey Lopes' shot
That, said Watson, was Indown the third base line In the first tentional.
inning. Right away, Yankee pitcher
"I noticed in batting practice that
Ron Guidry knew it would he a good the ball wasn't carrying to left cennight.
ter," he said. "I decided 1 would look
"If the ball's got to be hit for a pitch to hit the other way."
somewhere," Gllidry said, "I'd
Anned with the quick lead, Guidry
rather it be hit to him." •
had an easier task. "Anytime you
The next time the Dodgers came get a couple of runs In the first Into the plate, they were t11ree runs ning, you don't have to be so fine,"
behind, thanks to Watson. With one Guidry said. "You can just make
out In the
of the first, Jerry them hit the ball. I don't like to nip
M111llphrey singled. After Dave Win- . and tuck when I've got a lead like

bomm

that."

Pla·yers of week

'

·'

After a one-year stint as a pitcher
for the New York Giants (IH)
record;) Bamberger joined the
Baltimore Orioles as a minor-league
pitching coach and joined the parent
club In the same position in 1988.
While in charge of the Orioles'
staff, he produced 18 20-game winners as the Orioles won the
American League pennant In 1969,
'70 and '71, when the Birds had a
major-league-record four pitchers
with20ormorewina.
He left Baltimore in 1977 to
manage the Milwaukee Brewers,
and gulqed them to their first winning seasons ever in 1978 and '79.

The following spring, he suffered a
minor heart attack and underwent
heart bypass surgery, returning to
the bench In June. But he retired In
September of that year, and since
then has been a scout and minorleague administrator for the
Brewers .
It would have been a Ufetime
proposition, but the 58-year-old New
York native could not resist the l!ll"e
of his hometown.
"This was probably the toughest
decision I ever had to make," Bamberger said. "But I decided to come
back for three main reasons.
"One, it's the Big Apple, It's the
biggest, most exciting city in the
world. Two, I'm frau New York.
And three, I know Frank, I know
(assistant general manager) Lou

' Gorman, I know (administrative
IUIBistant)

n our .October 20 Price Breaker Advertisement, the 110-tb. Barbell Set DOES NOT inetude two 14" Dumbbell BArs, as stated in this
ad.
we regreat any inconvenience this may have
caused our customers.

Lebanon results
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Tamback took the lead in the last 50 feet
and won the $1,000 featured pace
mile Toesday night at Lebanon by a
half-length and paid $7 .•• $3.60 and
$3.40.
Our Buck placed, returning $3.40
and $2.60, and Gerrln's Sister was
worth $4.10 for third.
The 2-2 daliy double combination ·
of Grand Skipper and Mona's Fly
Byrd paid $173.80. Attendance was
1,018 and the mutuel• pool totsled
$100,647.

rll.-;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~y
PUr SAFElY FIRSI'
WD1I

GENERAL ALLERGIST
•

DALE ROJ'HGEB, JR.

•. He_._.. .........

Dollf .... _

I

CALL

..........

'(.din .............. ...., . . .

.

(614~2-2104

or (3CM)-6J5-1~44

'.....,. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ AD

,'!''

r

OHice Hours by App~lntment Only

I

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'

••

the air.

Vogel came up with the catclf as
time ran out.
Going into this week's action,
NG's.Shriver and Eastern's Bissell
are the league's tcp scorers with
three touchdowns each.

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
p
WLT
TEAM
1 0 0 154
Eastern
6 0 1 195
North Gall i a

Hannan Trace
Kyger Creek
southwestern
Southern

HARREY SHOES INC.
210 E. Mtln

Pomeroy
992-5272

3 3 0
3 4
2 5

I&gt;LLj;AMES
North Gallia
2 ()
Eastern
2 0
Hannan Tra ce
l 1
Kyg er Creek
l 1
Southern
0 2
Southwestern
0 2

SURE-N-STOP
MOBILE GAS STATION
Middleport

N. 2nd .

PEPSI, DIET PEPSI, MT. DEW
8-16 Oz.
Btls.

$129 :;~u:osi'

SUR E·N·STOP
Mobile Gas Station
Coupon Expires Oct. 30, 1981

Grade "A" Large

EGGS
DOZEN ,

59~

0

0
0 7 0

Al Haruin." Cuhen,

Gonnan and Harpin all wete with
the Orioles.
Bamberger, wbo will wear No.3!,
signed a one-year cmit"lct With the
Mets, although both he and Cashen
said the pact could have been as long
as three years if he had wanted it.
"I don't want to be paid if I fail,"
Bamberger said.
Financial tenns of the contract
were not disclosed, but Bamberger
reportedly will be paid $220,0110•
The Mets last won a pennant in
1973 and haven't had a winning
season since 1976. They were 41~2
this year, the fourth-worst record In
the National League, and Bamberger warned against expecting
any dramatic 111'"08round.

JOHN A. WADE, M. D., INC.
...
MEMOR~AL HOSPITAL
..... VETERANS
.
-·
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT

BOB HOEFLICH

Vogel. The play was set up when Rob
Waugh grabbed a John Porer pass
with just 13 seconds to go. With three
seconds left, Kyger Creek went to

.~~

...

..

touchdowns.
Eric Penick,
sophomore back, had rn yards
rushing while Charles Swisher and
J. J. Justice provided a strong defensive effort.
North Gallla got a second period
TD and 16 Points In the final stanza.
Hannan Trace was held to just 14
yards rushing.
'
In which turned out to he the
closest game Friday, Kyger Creek
edged Southern, 6-o on a game ending catch by freshman Chuck

.U.Islllat hbllllltriC•tn114!f

,Aarieu'Newiiii,.,P' ttl I •••
um"EIIIOFOPINJIJN,..,ok

DIVING STOP BY THE BURGLAR - New York Yankees third
Baseman Gralg Nettles dives to grab a ball hit by Los Angeles Dodgers
batter Davey Lopes, top, knocks tbe ball down, center, and reaches to
pick ~p the loose ball, bottom, before throwing out Lopes at firat baBe In
the first Inning of Tuesday night's World Series openlug gome In New
York. (AP Laserpboto)

SURE · N· STOP
Mobile Gas Stahon
Coupon Expires Oct. 30, 1981

"

'"
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ''' Tailback Ricky Calhoun of Eastern
• ' Michigan and safety Mike Kennedy
, of Toledo have been named MidAmerican Conference Football ·
Players of the W.eek.
Calhoun, a 6-foot, 100-pound
·•· sophomore from Toledo, Ohio, was
selected for the offensive laurels. He
gained a career high ofc194 yards
and caught three passes for 28 yards
in a 2&amp;-7 loss Saturday at Ohio
University.
·
Kennedy, a 5-11, 19'1l:pound senior.
' · from Toledo, was In on 13 tackles,
''" three of them for losses, in helpin~
·"" the Rockets trim Central Michigan
• 1'1"-3 on regional television. The vic.· ., torY gave Toledo the sole conference
• lead.
'

who rushed lor 138 yards, scored on
a seven yard jaunt.
Southwestern, In losing Its second
straight ·shutout, was led by Ron
Carr's 54 yards rushing.
North liallla recorded Its fifth
straight shutout, ~ against Hannan Trace.
Bruce Shriver, senior running
back, again provided the big offensive punch for North Gallia.
Shriver rushed for 138 yards and two

chosen as Mets' manager

'"

-

i

'

Rindolph. Together, they proved too
liiilCh for the Dodgen to cope with 1n
the Gpellin£ game ol the battle for
baaeball's world cbmupionohlp.
Wats&lt;JII became the 17th player 1n
history to hit a homer ln his first
Series at-bat, drti1lng 1 tbree-run
lhot In the firllt Inning, Nettlea turned In two \)UIBtandlng playa at third
bqe and iandolph had 11 couple at
second, ahortdn:ulllng the Los
AngeJee. attack In New York's s-3
vic:tory Tuesday night.
And soime less than glowing ,play
by the Dodgers made the National
League champions ll)(j[ shoddy by

· Eagles, Pirates
continue
SVAC
championship
quest
.
.,

R~p • .Mottl&lt;doesp 't .give as~istance

..

Dodgers In baseball's 78th World
Series.
_
The thunder belqed to Bob Watson and the defense wu provided by
Infielders Gnllg NeUies and WUI!e

0
0
0
0
0
0

40
65
50
48
58
66

15
14
0
0

OP

25"
28,
85
106
166
219
0
8
24
34
21
66

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' Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, ~hio

wednesday, October21, 1981

I

Pigskin expert picks Trojans over Irish ,
By Major Amos B. Hoople
Sage of the Sidelines
Egad, friends, one of the

trample Vanderbilt, 42-21.
In the Pac 10, the Arizona State
Sun Devils wiU dwnp Stanford,
38-21; UCLA will finish ahead ol
California, 30-20; and Washington
State, having a very good year,
will have little trouble with
Arizona, as il'records a 35-13 vic-tory,

n.alion's greatest rivalries tops

!he list of thi s week's collegi&amp;te
encounters. The mighty Trojans
of Southern California invade
South Bend, Ind., to take on the
Fighting Irish of Notre Dame,
giving Irish mentor Gerry Faust
his first taste of the intense
rivalry. Um-kumph!
In their 52 meetings, most of
wltich have ended on a note of
high drama 1 the Irish have gar-

nered 27 victories ~gains!' :11
defeats and 4 standoffs.
However - kaff-kaff - in the
past 10 contests, the Trojans hAve
dorni nated, w1th eight victories to
only two for N.D. (Incidentally,
both times Notre Dame won,- in

1973 and 197'1, they went on to win
the national Iitle.) And over that
1971-80 span. USC ha s racked up
291 points- a 29 points per game
average - while the Irish have
recorded a tota l of 214, or slightly
over 21 points per game. Jove!

They both know their way to the
end zone - heh-heh!
Thn; week we have had news

for the Irish £ol1owe1'S and - hafkaff- glad tidings for the Trojan
legions. The Hoople System pegs
lhc invaders to knock off the Irish

as t"ilback de luxe Marcus Allen
keeps up his relentless drive
toward the coveted Heisman
Award. We m"kcilUSC 31, Notre
Dame 24. Har-rumph!
Some other long-time rivalries
worthy uf noll' this week match
Ka·1sas and Kansas State, at
Lawrence, Kan ., for the 79th
time; North Carolina and South
Carolina, U1cir 49th meeting;
Hi-l rV&lt;-lrd and Princeton in their
74th engagement ; superpowers

Penn Slatc .and West Virginia for
the 38th tiine; and Southwest loop
foes . Texa S

and

Southern

.Methodist in their d~or-di e 6lst
battle.
Here is how we are ca lling
these classic contests:
The Kansas Jayhawks, en-

joyi ng a nne season, will over-

power the- Wildcats, 21·19, in a
real crowd • pleaser. The Nprth
carolina - South carvlina affair
will be a real barn-burner, with
,N.C. taking a one touchdown victory, 35-28.
T·hey 'll he celebrating in Cam- ·
.bridge, Mass., on Saturday night
as the home forces of Johh· Harvard triwnph over Princeton, 2113; and' the same will he true in
University Park, Pa., as Penn
State's Nittany Lions prevail
over a fine West Virginia eleven ,
28-22.
Southern Methodist is suspended from bowl play this year and
next. So this week will be its
chance to show its wa1·es. And it's
- heh-heh - beware time for the
Texas Longhorns. The Hoople
team from the Lone Sl&lt;!r state
predicts a Mustang lri urn ph over
the Longhorns, 21-17-har·humph!
On the independent front we
look for Oklahoma to roll over
Oregon St., by a 42-21 margin;
Pitt to turn back Syracuse, 35-14;
Alabama to stop Rutgers, 28-14;
Miami, of Florida, to thump East
Carolina, 35-7; and Florida State
to wind up iIs brutal Octo her
sl&lt;!te by topping l.SU, 35-22.
In the conference races, starting with the Southeastern, we
confidentl y predict a Georgia victory over Kentucky , 26-17
Mississippi State to vanquish
Auburn, 27-li; and Missis8ippi to

Central Michigan U Kent St. II
Citadel42 Newberry ll

Clem50fll5 N. carolina St. 10
Colgate 24 Columbii 7
Colorado St. 27 UTEP 22

.

Georgia Tech 22 Tulane 14
Geoi"gia 281&lt;entucky 17

The top contest in th Big Eight
matches Nebraska and Missouri
for the 75th repeat in their series.
In a bruising battle we see the
Tigers from the "Show Me" state
turning back the Nebraska Cornhuskers, 24-21. For Missouri
coach Warren Powers, a '63
graduate of Nebraska, it will be a
memorable triwnph!
Also in the Big Eight, tM surprising Iowa State Cyclones will
have little trouble with Colorado
as they notch a 2!HI win.
In the SWC, watch for Houston
to trim Arkansas, 33- J7; Baylor to
edge TCU, 27-21, and Texas A&amp;M
to defeat Rice, 24-14.
A trio of games in the Atlantic
Coast Conference will go like
this: Clemson, 35, N.~. State 10;
Maryland Tl, Duke 23; and Wake
Forest 21, Virginia 14.
There's a full slate of contests
on the Big 10 card and here's how
we are calling them: Ohio State
35, Indiana 14; Michigan 49, Northwestern 14; Iowal7, MiMesota
14; Purdue 27, Michigan State 20,
arid Illinois 28, Wisco(ISin 21. .
Brigham Young will stay on the
. title road in the Western Athletic
race as they triwnph, 32·22, over
Wyoming.
The c'enler of attraction in the
great state of New Mexiro this
week will be Las Cruces where
New Mexico State will entertain
arch rival New Mexico for the
73rd time. The Lobos of New
Mexico are our pick to win, 28--21.
Har-rurnph 1

Grambling 38 Jack5on St. 19
Harvard 21 Princeton 13
Hawaii 24 San Diego St. 21
Holy Cross 35 Brown 10

Houston 33 Arkansas 17
Illinois 28 Wisconsin :n
·Iowa 17 MinnesOta 14

• Iowa st. 25 Colorado 6
Kansas 21 kansas St. 19

lafayette 33 GeHysburg 20

Lehigh 23 BuckneiiiO
Long Beach St. 31 Fullerton St. 16
Maryland 27 Duke 23
McNeese St. 36 Arkansas St. 28
Miami COhio) 24 Ohio U. 13
Mi•mi (Fla.) 35 e;. Carolina 7
Michigan 49 Northwestern 14
Mississippi St. 22 Auburn 6
""' Mississippi 42 vanderbilt 21
Missouri 24 Nebraska 21
Montana 20 Portland st. 7
Navy 30 Williams &amp; Mary 10

New Mexico 28 New Mexico St. 21
N. Arizona 24 Montana St . 12
N. Carolina 35 S. Carolina28
W. Texas St. 21 Texas-Arlington 14
Ohio St. 35 Indiana 14
Oklahoma 42 Oregon St. 21

Oklahoma St. 15 Louisville 13
Oregon 23 Air Force 21
Penn St. 28 west Virginia 22
Pitts~rgh 35 SyracuH 14
Purdue 27 Michigan St. 20
San .JOse St. 36 Utah St. 12
Southern Calli Notre Dame 24
SMU 21 Texas 17

Tennes~eelO Me~phis St. 14

Templ.e 24 Cincinnati 21
Texas A&amp;M 24 Rice 14
Toledo 19 Bowling Green 13
UCLA 30 California 20

Utah 36 Nevada-Las Vegas 33
Virginia Tech ll Appalachl~n St.

" VMI 23 Marshall13
.

Wake Forest21 Virginia 14
Washington 23 Texas Tech 20
Washington St. 35 Arizona 13
W. Michigan 28 Ball 51.7
Wichita St. 24 Tulsa 10
Yale 28 Pennsylvania 14
C Friday's area high school games&gt;
Waham 7 St. Mary's 6
!(yger Creek 16 Southwestern 12
North Gallla 40 Southern 0
Eastern 36 Hannan Trace 0
Gallipolis 24 Waverly 23
Ironton 28 Meigs 24
Jackson 16 Athens14
logan 22 Wellston 22

Now go on with my forecast :
Alabama 28 Rutgers, 14
Arizona St . 38 Stanford 21
Baylol' 27 TCU 21

Pt. Pleasant 33 Ravenswood 22
Oak Hill6 Rock Hill 0
Coal Grove66Symmes ValleyO

Boston College21 Army 14
Boise St . 24 Weber St. 21
BYU 32 Wyoming 22

, Cinclnnati Bengals are for real or
· not doesn't m~ tter . They think they

·are and that's good enough for
Coach Forrest Gregg.

"Absolutely! The menl&lt;!l approach is a big part of football.
There's no question about it," said
Gregg, whose 0.2 team leads the
American Conference Central

Division.
"You reach a plateau as a football
player when, .number one, you have
confidence in yourseU. Number two,
you play better when you have con-

team
is there
turnedwas
around.
First
Coach Lisle Blackbourne at Green Bay with a f-8
' record. Then there was Coach
Scooter McLean, whose record was
1-10-1 before Lombardi came.
"We had good players and then
they hlld a good draft in 1958. What
Lombardi did was bring order to it,''
said Gregg, adding a long, "Oh,
yeah ... '' when asked If that Included
a change in mental approach.
"When you've been loalng, doubt
sets in. You doubt the people around
you al\11 you start doubting yourself.
They (Bengals) are thinking win
now instead of lose. It probably goes
back to early this season when we
came from behind and won some
games. It may even go back to.late
last season, when we got a few
people healthy again and won three
ofourlastfour,'' said Gregg.

Shawn Eads
150 Pound
Sophomore Tailback

Dave Follrod
136Pound
Sophomore Halfback

tangibles
are Involved,
the tangible
Gregg said
that while
the inirnP.rovements to the Bengals inc!nde an efficient offensive line,
quarterback Ken Anderson's best
year as a pro and pass receivers.

Randy Stewart
117Pouod

Sophomore End

It may be the moot pressing issue maxirnwn of $11. "I didn't like to
for Ohio hl8h schools today - · charge kids to play," said Wlllllerwhether &amp;OJIIIIlunltles should finan- vllle South Athletic Dlredor Ron
ce extracurricular activities, par- Jones, "but it was the Only way to
keep sports afloat."
ticularly sports.
More criaes are on the horizon.
With the cutback in state and
Sidney,
Ute most of the 193 school
federal education funds, school admlnlstratocs must turn to their own districts with operating levies on
communities to keep their annual next month's blllot, will drop
baskelball and all Oilier winter exbudgets out of the red Ink or, more
im(lortanUy, to keep school doors tracurricular activities Jan. I If ita
open.
6.0.rnlll,two-year levyfalla Nov. 3.
The special operating levies tm:ust
Sidney Mayor Gary Van Fouen l.s
before voters divide lown.l. They leading a 1,500-volunteer drive.
cause hard feetini!S. Their failures
"We bave .a lot of conun)llllty incan·deny seniors their final bids for volvement now, which ,we didn't
coUege athletic scholarships.
· bave before. We're optlmlatlc," said
Such a levy failure in August cost Jerry Allen, the Sidney principal.
Lucas, a smaU Richland Co!mty "We've made the cuts people aaked
school, its lootbaU and girls' us to. We've changed the levy from
volleyball programs thl.s fall. The continuing to two years. We're,
levypassed on its third attempt !ali baving public hearings on it."
week, and the district will have
SUII, Allen concedes it's a bitter
basketball and other winter ac- fight.
tivities.
•'Some of the community feel.s the
For Chris Wolfgang, the Lul:as board in no way would cut sports;:
levy pasoage was a time of joy. For he said. "But others feel we
classmate Scott Cox, a football star, shouldn't even bave sports."
it did not erase the bitter fall
Feelings are running even higher
memories.
in neighboring Qreenvllle, where the
"I'm pretty happy," said the 6- school's Ion~athletic director,
foot-4 Wolfgang, a center for Lucas' · Jolin Sub a, has postponed
u!-4· baskethall team last winter. retirement plans for one year.
"I've grown up in thl.s community. I
"I'm not going to retire In Ught of
wanted to play my final year at this all the pressures, the mean feellqgs,
school. I didn't want to transfer."
the prejudices," Suba said. "We
Cox said the hardest part for him bave a group here 'working against
was Friday nights, when he went to any new levy. Two fonner school
other schools to see other foptball board members have a personal
players perfonn. After school each vendetta against the board."
,
day, instead of practicing his sport,
The Greenville Athletic Departhe "just went home."
ment pledged $6,000 of the $42,000
''There really wasn't much to dO," raised to keep footbaU and other ache said. "I didn'Uike it."
tivities going this fall.
Coli didn't think about Iran·
"We don't gel a permy's help from
sferring to play football . But other the board except for coaches'
teanunates did transfer. And so did salaries," he said. "We pay for our
Marla Masters, Lucas' bel!l girls' paper clips, telephone call.s and even
tr~ck star. She now attends Manour full·time secretary."
sfield Madison.
Bob Wine, Lucas' athletic director, said, "We bad to do it, but it was . - - - - - - - - - - - tough taking football away from the
kids. We were 7-2-1 last year and
most of them were back. We were
going to have a good season."
"Some people didn't believe we
were that bad off,'' Wine·said. "They
Meigs Co. Rd. 10
realize now that we need the money,
we were going to have to borrow
- EVANGaiST:
from the state or consolidate with
anotherdlslrict."
RODGER CHILDERS
Other school.s have dealt differenUy with levy failures.
7:30 Nightly
Greenville reHed on volunteers,
Special Singing Nightly
Citizens for Conunon Sense, to raise
$42,000 in pledges and keep footbaU
ThUIS.-Gabriel Quartet
going thia. season. A 3.f-mill Greenville levy failed in August.
Sal-Gospel Family
• Westerville, ita 13-mill levy a
SingeiS
failure in November 1980, resorted
to charging each student $10 to play
OCTOBER 22-24

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fidence in the people around you.
Then you win a few games and the
enthusiasm gets contagious and a
team starts believing in itself,"
Gregg said.
Gregg, wl!o·took the helm in 1960
after consecutive f-12 seasons, is
turning around the Cincinnati Iranchise.
He bad a reputation as a wiMer,
having played with Vince Lorn·
bardi's cllampion Green Bay
Packers. But he was also there
before Lombardi and learned bow a

Meet the Meigs Marauders

SlORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am-10 pm

/ ----~---------L-----

Florida St. JS L$U 2t
Furman 28 Liberty Baptist 7

The Daily Senlinei- Page:--S

•

· By George Strode

Connecticut 33, Maine 4
Dartmouth 22 Cornetl21
Oe.laware 18 Rhode Island 14
Drake 28 W. Texas St. 24

Bengals now believe in th-e mselves
CINCINNATI (API- Whether the

Ohio.
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�·.
Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlePOrt, OhiO

'

nednesday, Oclo.,er 21, 1911

.
Wednesday, October 21, 1981 ·

'

Pom~roy-Middleport,

Rio Grande wiil' host 'The Hobbit'
RIO GRANDE -

The dwarf's,

gnomes, elves and the trolls of
J.R.R. Tolkien's "The Hobbit" will
come to !fie at Rio Grande College
and Community College Sunday,
Nov. 15at 2:30p.m.
A two-hour rendition of the Tolkien
f'!JllasY will be presented in the Fine
and Perfonning Arts Center on the
college campus by the Hutsah Puppet Theatre.
•
The program is the second in the
five-part Artist Series at Rio Grande. The program is sponsored by Rio
Grande College with the support of
the Ohio Arts Council.
Trapezoid, a natinally-acclaimed
West VIrginia musical group,
opened the series Oct. 17. After the
Nov. · 15 show, remaining performances will be by the Ballet
Metropolitan of Columbus, the Hot·
mud Family of the midwest, and the
Pro Musics Chamber Orchestra of
Columbus.
The Hobbit is the prelude to
Tolkien's trilogy "The Lord of the
Rings." In the fantasy, a dwarfish
· hobbit named Bilbo Baggins and a
' group of dwarfs go on a journey to
recapture their treasure from an
evil dragon. Along the way they encounter several different ad·
FIVE GENERATION FAMILY - Mrs. Effie Sanders of Route I,
Reedsville, Is pictured here holding ber great-great-granddaughter, April
Marie Johnson. Standing Is Mrs. Esther Riggs, Logaa, grandmother of
the Infant, Mrs. Dorothy Dodderer, Route I, Reedsville, her greatgrandmother, and Mrs. James (Teresa) Johnson, Logan, mother of April
Marie.

ve;:,~resHutsah

pnsed the musiCal score aDd built College and Ccmmunily College, Rio
For furlber information call (814)
most of hte puppets.
Grande, Ohio ~4.
2454353, at. 3M.
Steiger bas been involved in pup- 1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

pet-making lor about six years and
is an actor and a magic~. Some rl
his troupe's production include a
series of television commercials and I
a musical lor children called ·
"SWinging Throughhe Trees." He
chose the Tolkien work becauae of
its popularity among college audlen'Ces.
.
"I think it's a shame that fantasy
is often set aside in adOI&lt;!Sftnce in
the name of growng up and being
cool," Steiger said. "Why is It appropriate for a kid oo watch a puppet
show or a cartoon or play kick-thecan, butnotanadult."
Tickets are available at $5 for
adults, $4 for senior· citizens (over
60); and $2.50 for students. Tickets
may be obtained from the main of·
!ice of the Fine and Perfonning Arts
Center from 8 a.m. to 4:30p.m. Monday through Friday or send a check
payable to Rio Grande College along
with a self-addressed, stamped en·
velope to Artist Series, Fine and
Perfonning Arts Series, Rio Grande

HIIIZ

AT

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1982·VOLKSWAGEN
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Marine Pvt. Angelo B. Cross, son
of Gladys J. and Amos B. Cross Sr.
of 30976 Will Vance Road, Langs·
ville, has completed recruit training
at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot,
Parris Island, S. C.
I;Juring the ll·week training cycle,
he. learned the basiCs of battlefield
survival. He was introduced to the
typical daily routine that he will ex·
perience during his enlistment and
studied the persona l and
professional standards traditionally
exhibited by Marines.
He participated in an active
physical conditioning program and

gained proficiency in a variety d
military skills, including first aid,
rine marksmanship and close order
.drill . Teamwork and self-&lt;liscipline
were emphasized throughout the
training cycle.
A 1981 graduate of Meigs High
School, Pomeroy, he joined the
Ma~ine Corps ,in September 1981.

Stewart
Pvt. Carl A. Stewart, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Talmadge E. Stewart of
Route 2, Letart, W. Va ., has completed basic training at Fort Knox,
Ky.
During the training, students

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tiered twenty-foot long stage. Rusty
Steiger, who directs the troupe, com- ·

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Retirement and b-day party
A lawn party hosted by Jack and
Betty Farrar, Swnner, was . held
recently to honor Barbara Sargent,
Chester, on her recent retirement
and birthday.
Mrs. Sargent retired from her employment at the infirmary,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy; after
21 years. Her retirement plans in·
elude a trip to Florida in the near
future with' Mrs. Farrar. Mrs.
Sargent retains her parttime. employment with K"''bauglfs Shak~
Shoppee in Tuppeb Plains.

A hayr'ide, a weiner_ roast and

Amber. Milton and Ruth Tuttle,
Waller and Sharon Tuttle, Ira and
Karen Showalter, Tom and Becky
Monkin, Bob and Pat Keaton, Nor- ·
man and Joanne Baum, Gary
Gregory, John and Pam Wolfe, Marvin and Marjorie Keebaugh, the
hosts, and Mrs. Sargent.
Also honored at the party were
Ruth Tuttle on her birthday, Walter
and Sharon Tuttle on their' anniversary, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Gregory, the fonner Susan Tuttle,
on their recent wedding, and Mr.
and Mrs. Farrar on their anniversary.

other food, and games were enjoyed
by the group. Attending were Greg
and Cindy Hayes, their daughter, r - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1

BP clinic
Thirty-one persons had their blood
pressure taken at the free clinic held
recently at the Harrisonville Senior
Citizens Center. Thirteen remained
for lunch along with one guest, Mrs.
Sandy Boring. Next clinic will be
held on Nov. 13, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.

DOWNING-CHILDS
INSURANCE
AGENCY

531 JACKSON PIKE · At. 35 WEST

Phone 446· 4524
~RGAIN fi«ArWEES ON SAT &amp; SUN

ALL SEATS JUST 51.50 ;
110111/SSION EVERY TUESllAr $1,$0

r: FRIDAY, thru THURSDA';!,.,.l

LQCTOBER 16 thru_Ej

THE NIGHT

Til~

LIGHT{~\)~~fbUT

try

~~0(~ GEORGIA

.:a---,
,

.. ... . .... . ....
\

1111111' IIITIIOIDS lm

,

PAniiNITY

GIL$

2nd WEB:: 7:00 &amp; 9 :00 P.M.
AT &amp; SUN MATINEES 1:00 &amp; l :OO

I 7. ::;~. STEAK ...............
( Llii1DMARK

115 N. 2nd AVE.
MIDDLEPORT
'
992·2342

L_B_

'

SLICED BACON. ........ ... ~~

them to
some
paper
lfiOIJfd
•

12

AIHIES ........ :......... oz
PIPCIRI .... ... ~~

21.8

...oz
29

. . . ........oz

You can tell your kids· 'that
' money doesn't grow on trees until
· you're red In the face. But the best
way to teach them about money Is to
let them go ~t and earn some of the
real grftn stuff themselves.

IPPLEI

LB

II

MAJESTIC

·

SPRAY EIAMEL ......... .-~~~

.•a•

I

••'
•'

I
I

.

IIDD FLDII....... -~·

.•

42

11101

. . . . . . . . .. ••••oz

''•

,,

8

,

. .... . ...oz

••

·~

PH. 992-2156

20

•I•

12

JUST CALL OUR CIRCUlATION
DEPARTMENT. TODAY FOR
MORE INFORMATION, ' 1

•.

•

2

•

The Daily Sentinel

&amp;

10

COFFEl ........ ~.z.

$

BEINI ............. ~~- ~

121
........... ~;~~ ~ 169
280
CT.

I

'·I•

.,

•

..

'

..

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�. }IVtcl~esd1y; ~tober21, 1981
,

Page-8- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Mid~ort,

Ohio

Family Medicine _ _ _ __
By Stepb&lt;ll Kielll, D.O.

Mil Pnll.

Melllelae

OldoUIIiv.
A

Question: I am
81 years old and
have never had
arthritis a bit.
Now the doctor
says my · 7-yearold great-grandson
hu
rheumatoid arthritis. I think this
doctor must be a
arthritis an old
~ that
.
II poulble my
runs in
great-grandson has arthritis? What
should we do?
Answer: Arthritis means joint Inflammation. It, Uke many other
disorders, Is more prevalent In older
age gro!!ps because the many causes
of joint inflanunalion such as Infection or injury 'are more Ukely In
the elderly.
.
. However, it is not too unusual for a
7-year.()ld to have lnfiammed joints.
Severe and crippling diseases Uke
Juvenile Rheumatoid Arthritis
•

--

Wednesday,October21,' 1981

(JRA), as wen as Injury and 1no
fecliON', are all poulble bllhla age
group.
The situation II even more confusing becaWJe JRA Is not a single
entity but rather a nwnber of

diseases grouped 11 one. Some
similarities are noted betwaen theae
dlaealle!l but not all have the same
symptoms. There are even some for1111 of rh4;umatold arthritis ill that
age group which produce no joint Inflammation lit all. In fact, It II my
feeling that JRA would often be better called synovitis 1han arthritis
because the lnflanunalion II largely
directed against hie connective
tissue (synovial membrane) which
surrounds the joints rather than the
bones and Clrtilage most often consldered when ~ joints.
Synovial membranes are the thick
tissues surrounding the joints ·and
tendons
produce
the
lubricating which
fiillds needed
to penni!
smooth joint mOtion. Also aH~ed
by some fonns of JRA are the arteries which carry blood to such
organs as the eyes and kidneys and
heart.
As you Imply, a hereditary tendency has been suggested for some

HELP- Christi Maide08 and Crockelt Roush, Uttle Miss and Mr.
Meigs County, will assist in the presentation ol the aiiiiWII Meigs Couaty
Junior Miss Pageant at 7:10p.m. Saturday at Soulherll Hlgb Scboolln

"'
form~ bf a'rthrltis. However, ooly a

Astrograph ·.

Open house held
'

OpeD

house was

Pomeroy-MiddlePOrt, Ohio

'

hadlnmlnd.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NOY. 221 If
you are an unattache&lt;l Scorpio
woman, · don't turn down In·
vltatlons toUy where vou have
~nil in to mHI new-le.
Mr. RIVhlmay make the scene.
SACJITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.

OCtobor 22, 1911
This coming yi!ar you are likely
to make friends with .someone

oltlerved at the

Salem Center Elemelllary School
Tuesday night. David L. Gleason,
Melp Local School Dl8trict IIUpel'intendent, was present to diacuA the

who poa$HStl rather unusuel

.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 21-Fob.

~-

You're

lh&lt;t not lfhleYI lit YOU are
CIPiblt Of ilteomplilhing,
PISCES (Fob. -lrch 201 In ·
partnerShip aituatlonstoday. be a
~ llotenerwhan your associate
lays out oome Ideas. Thay . may

IOdiY In accomplishing your
goala. Nellhar obltaclts nor com·
petition will deter you from
reachjng your mark.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. If)
If you've been pushing yourself
too Aard lately, trv to b~eak !JP

second sourte of income.

LIBRA ISopt. 23·0cl. 23)
Unusual or unexpectl'd changes
lend to work for your ·benefit
today,. Don't get rattled If things
tall to follow !he blueprint you

It)

botn a planner ond a doer

today. Unfortunately, you may
leave things to the lut minute

21 l You',-. extremelv rttOUrceful

talents. This person could be
helpful to you In opening up a

few ldnda o1 JRA appw: to lbow lhla
famUial (family) ~tion. It
has a1ao been found that most types plaMed addition of two new
of JRA afflict females more o!ten ciasarooms to the school. He noted
than males.
that Jan. I II tiie target date for the
Unfortunately, medical research new claasroo1118. Refreslunenll
has not yet pinpointed .the cause of . were served following the meeting.
JRA. Due to our lack, of knowledge
about thla dl-se and lis multiple .---~-:-------fonris, the outcome ol JRA cannot
be accurately predicted and can
only be evaluated as the symptoms
Jli'Oill'e88.
In swnmary, It Is poulble that
your greal;lrandsoll has JRA.
Therefore, I feel the best course for
you to follow Is one of ·close
. cooperation bet~n your lamlly
' and your great-grandson's physician
for the most effective dlagoosls and
treatment of this unpredictable
disease.
·

your routines today with ac·
llvlllos .which afford you
'pleasure. Tha change will do you

not sound like much at flrsf, but
they could be quite Ingenious.

The

ARIES (Morch 21·Aprllltl Be
careful about lmplemontlng lm·
petuous changes today. Actions
not thought out could set you back
a few pat:es rather than move you
ahead.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 201

Normally you like to take emple
time before making decisions,
but t,oday you may make snap

Iudgments which won't be up to

vourusual caliber. ·
GEMINI

(Moy 21·June 20l

You're. easy to vet along with
today If things go your way, but
should someone buck your views

you could become quite tern ·
per omental. KHp 1 cool hood .
CANCER (Ju.. 21·JUIY 22)
Your posolbllllles lor gains are
good today, provided vou don't

D~lly Sentinel-PI,._,

before

they

are

finalized ..

. Something unexpected m.lvht oc·

.cur to alttr the picture.

take foolish risks. Unwlw gam ·
bles could prove rather cost IV.

THE 1912 WILTON
YEARBOOKS

something than you would if you
lOOked around a bit. Be patient ,

ARE INI

LEO I July 22·Aug. 22) Afailure
to comparison-shop today could
lead you to pay more ~or

pruden! and probing.
.
VIRGO !Aug. 2:1-Sopf. 22l Don't

CAROUSEL CONFECTIONERY

talk about business or money

matters

prematurelv

today

Ph. 992-6342
317 N. 2nd., Middleport

•

••
•

IAYI u• '10 40% ON
soo•a COS'I c• i I laS
CGIPIIED TO mEa IIANDS• AT KIIICEI.

SOIEIW£1 COlT cmtiS, 10 mEIWIM AI£ STOCKED.

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;j;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiii

OUR HUNTERS SPECIAL
CONTINUES THROUGH
THIS WEEKI

AOIIERTISEO ITEM POLICY

..,..1ltloel '"''" •

~td to bl
reldity JY~ii*t for lilt 1n .-c:h Kroger 510ft. UOIPt •
notlld 1n . . • - •t-~• e10 """'OoJt tA .. .,..
·

Elcft or .,._

• -w,

Mtm.

oftt;
yOur c:hoict of conw• itlm,
""'*'
ttfllct"'' IN umt llvirlgl 1 rllinchecl
wM:tt Wllllfltllll
pyre'- lhl eOt•liwcl illm II ...
't'OI.I

WI _.

~.

1

0t

¥o.~IO

IIII!DII liW 'IICI

,ct.+ biild pta lllflldiWt 30 Olyl .

Racine.

Little Mr. and Miss yvill
help with Junior Miss
The board of directors of and Miss Meigs County will assist in
SoutheaSt Ohio Junior Miss. 'Inc. the anouncing of the 1982 Meigs
today announced that the Little Mr . . County Junior Miss Saturday. Oct.
24, at the Southern High School,
Racine. The program wiU begin at
7:10p.m. Little Miss Meigs County is
Christi Maidens, age 6, daughter of
Dale and Roberta Maidens, Racine.
She attends Racine Elementary
School. Little Mr. Meigs County Is
Crockett P. Roush, age 4, son of BiU
and Karen Roush, Syracuse. He at·
. Wednesday
lends the Cingerbread Pre-Nursery
THE THIRD Wednesday
School.
Homemakers Club will meet
The Little Mr. and Miss contest Is
Wednesday, oct. 21, from 10 a.m.
sponsored by 'the Middleport
Business and Professional WomeiJ's
.to 3 p.m. at Syracuse Municipal
Building. Members are to bring
Club during the Meigs County Fair.
covered dish, table service, and
Tickets for the program are on sell
empty soup cans, moving eyes,
at New York Clothing House,
pipe cleaners and white candls
Southern High School and Meigs Inn.
for the present project.
Advance tickets are $2 for adults and
$1.50 students.
GROUP II of the Firat United
Meip County Junior Mila, 11161,
Presbyterian Church, MidMiss Sonja HiU, will announce the
dleport, will meet Tuesday .at
rrew Meigs County Junior Miss who
7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
will represent the county at the state
Joseph Bailey. Mrs. Harry Moore
finals at Mount Vernon, the first part
and Miss Kathryn Hysell will serof February.
.
ve as e&lt;&gt;·hostess.
Mrs. Carl Horky, program
chainnan, wiU review the book
"Joni." Ms. Don Lowery will be
in charge of devotions.

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
E~t"ng you bl.l'f'

Final Going Out of Business

•'*'·

Instant

fled . KIOfl' -MII'repiaca your Item With lhl llmt bfand ~- 1
~lblt btlf\d or refund your l)!ltchlle pr•ce.
..

S _A L E .

USDA

CO,YIIGHT ltll • THI ICIOOII CO. ITIMS AND P.ltCIS
0000 SUNDA'tf . Oct. II , TMIOUGH $ATUIDAY. OCT . 24 ,
ltll . IN _POMEROY AND GA 1. L lf'.$UaJ.ii.J.9.RE~ . _'\

Boneless ·
Pot Roast ...

20% Off STOREWIDE
CUSTOM COLOR SYSTEM
.

·1200 Colors ot

.

Durable Ou Pont LUCilE
for long-lasting beauty,
• All colors in wall paint,
house painl and Interior
enamel.
· • New color displays make
selection easy.

October 29 - Nov. 5
30% OFF.

November 5 • 12
'·

SO% OFF

FRIE

November 12-19

COl!ISULT.ATION!
Ute our color expertlte

SCAVENGER HUNT
UIDS TAKEN ON ALL FIXTl'RF;S &amp;

lo beautify your home

CAUl NETS

The Sewing Center

Or let Ul match your exact color
prelerence.

.:=---~-;-:::...--;;--::" ~ ":"::::--=::~

MiddiPport, Ohio

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W.VA.

'

.

.

Gwaltney
Great Dogs

I

: u-o•o•.....,

1

:
I ·

·l - .l b 7
Pkg.

:.

Fresh Ham ... ·......
I

The Rev. Mrs. Dorothy Jago, a
fanner resident of the Rutland

area, will relurn to the area to
conduct a revival from Oct. 23
through Nov. !• at tht\ Danville
Wesleyan Church. Services will
start at 7:30. The public is invited.
The Meigs Vocal Music
Boosters will sponsor a 50's sock
hop at the Meigs High School
Friday after the Meigs-Ironton
game. Time wiU be from 10 to
12:30. Admission is $2 a person.
Greg Vance from WMPO will
'
provide the music.

-~~..,.~nmuecauam

••••••••••••••••••
All VARIETIES , SIRVE 'N' SAVE
SLICID

Luncheon .t-lb.
Meats ........ Pkg.
JUMIO OR CHEESE

EckrichFlESHFranks
... -~::
FARM RAISED
'
Fillets .......

.1

7g~

Avondale
Ca t I Up .. ...

32 - o~ .

111.

•oa.
M•II ... .. . :.' _.D"•·

•

HOLLY FARMS . U.S.D.A . INSPECTED
GRADE A

Kroger
BuHermilk Bread

Chicken
Thighs....• ....
•

28

lb .

ggc

IIIOIIN

II roger

P0 t , .tel.. . •·••·
....
WKOU IUIMlL

FROZEN 9-LIS. AND UP SWIFT'S U.S.D.A.
GRADE A REGULAR BUTTERBALL

Avondale "·'·••

Turkey ... ....... .... lb.
OLE CAIIOLINA
sr1ced Bacon ...... Pka:
1:1b

•

$199

DRISIID

Catfish ......

lb.

~~u~:~~!~~llg:~--

$2·s159

THE

Man.mallow

COUNTIV OVIN

Potato
Chi pl ...... s...••. .

~=~~.

ENOUGH"

F00d...........
KROGIR LARGE

.

12-ol. .
Pke.
.

179

$ 39

Grade A Eggs ... .. oo•.

AQUA·fRISH

Toothpaste .......
MISSIRICK

•

'

.

$159

Gllzed

Denuh ..... ......
"'•·

PMr
H.-·. . . . ..... ......
Cen

BIG

FOR BIG

.

APPE11TF.S ...

-------------·,

'

sse.

Diet Rite or
R.C. Cola

HILLCIIIT

Manschino
Jaf
ChI rri11 .- .. •·••·
AVONDALI

·$ 19

Mandarin

0 rang11 .. . c.,
VIenna

r-...a

U11111

·Fresh

Broccoli

.

Ita ftl ...... 11·01.
c...

5.SJ

(liEITIAI liWI'IICl)

tAIGI ~SIZE PIIST OF THE SEASON,
FLOIIDA

-

Red or White
GrapefrUit. ,... For
-~ITAYMAN
. 5
$139
Apples .. .. .. .. .. .. ~=~

,
17

IXTIIA FANCY W-TON, IJI SIZE
RID 01 GOLDIN

Dellclot.JS Apples1ach
SHP tD INGliSH
Walnuts .... :.... ·.. '"·
1

V"

-

w ..-.ttnhlre

s..c. ...... 'tr.··

C

S2••

.

Kr~:~• A•alla.,le

A
. .laftl_
Olh• •kl..'l ' •

.....w...

.raek.o.........

Vern Story, Rl 2, Laurel Cliff
Road, Pomeroy, Ia a -.leal
paliellt at Holzelj Medical Ceilter,
room :m c.rdll may be .rt to
him 1n care f1l the hoepllll.

' ''------------------------------~~------

··-

... -

sgc .
4gc
43c
45e
-

---~-

ICIOGII

Tua..

$149

, .••.

....sage ... c••

$119'

9-ol . .

11 · 01 .

IIOGII

•.• -ol.

Ha1r Spray ......... ctnr.

Club recently. Her name was
.. unintentionally omitted from an
: earlier listing of those there.

C

age,

fiOIIN KIOOEit

IITUINAILI
I.C. 1Gq,

C:i.~~;~RICAN

age

·: : age

ICIUOOG'S

AVONDAll

INDIVIDUALL V WRAI'I'ID SLiCES '

•

......
,...,. SJ49.

creme ..... 13·01.
...

•

~BIG

Coconut
GOlOCIISY

·

C

KIOGII

Flake
1

gg c.
79e

I

coe

::::iF~:·:~;~· $129

09 .

Jeno ,I p•IZZa .. .. 12.5-ol.
Pkg.
FROZEN IIIDS lVI
C00I Whi p.. .·.: ...... 12-ol.
Ctnr.

39
'

1 Corn

lb.

FROZEN

Mrs. Mildred J acllbs attended
the anniversary celubration of
the Laurel Cliff Better Health

There will be a soup supper at
United Methodist
Churcll located on State Route 681
west of Tuppers Plains; or five
mlles from Darwin on 681, Saturday night. Servin(! will be from 5
to8p.m. with the menu to include
chill', bean, vegetable and potato·
1011p, sandwiches, cornbread,
pie, coffee and pop. Evecythlng
will be 50 cents with the ~on
f1l drinks which will be 20
II.
The supper II sponsored y the
Alfred United Methodist Women.

lb.

Avondale
.
I .... S·t&gt;l
Ge Ia tn
"•-

$299

FRnH ;uM RAISED

~..-··

$119

laking

$J89

.

Salad
•
32 ·01Drtllml
... '"

JIFFY

$~1~

CATI'I5H

:Announcement

the Alfred

Smoked Picnic

LIMIT ONE COUPON
FAMILY • •
. :
~~~~~~- DI.ICI. II·Ul.ICI. 21. till

.

lb.

age
$ 49
1

IMIASSY

ag e

5-7-LI. AVG. WHOLE

Pl~

I l2
I D'

lb.

$37~ .

Bags.. .... IOO
,.,·Co .'

14·17-LI. AVG. WHOLE

Thursday

Friday

Fox De Luxe
P•tzza .... ... IIP'kg·GI. .

$179

Fresh Picnic ...... . lb.

LIMIT 3PKcS. WITH COUPON

Joo

T;;m

4·6·\1. AVG. WHOU

9c

\o ... .

fiOZI!N •

CHOICE

Octo er 22 - 29

~~--

PRECEPTOR Beta ~eta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 6:30
p.m. Thursday at teh home of
Mrs. Clarice Krauter.

Coffee ...

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE .
IIIF CHUCK

Social
Calendar .

TilE MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club will meet at the home of
Mrs. Bert Grimm at 2 p.m. Wednesday with Mrs. Betty Fultz to
give the book review.

kiOGEI

II Kroget II gu1ranleed tor your lOIII
litllttciiOn ''lll'~of,lninuttttwr• . 8 vou .. not

This Is Our • • •

o:o

�,'

""

Sentinel Want' Ads

Area grqups' meeting notes
Junior auxiliary
Juniors of Drew Webster Poet 39,
American Legloo Auxllary, held a
birthday party for Bill Rovnak, a
veteran at the Arcadia Nursing
Home, Saturday afternoon.
·Rovnak, 72, is the adopted" handicapped veteran. He waa presented
a gift and a large decorated birthday
cake which was aerved with punch to
all of the residents of the home.
Going from here for the party were
Kim Patterson, junior president;
Robin Campbell, Anita Smith; Loret·
ta Tiemeyer, Auzillary preside!!!:
· Veda Davis, junior chainnan, and
Abna Johnson, a guest.
The 14 veterans at the home were
all given trick or treat hags as
favors.
·
'j

Ladies Auxiliary
An Election Day dinner was planned when the Ladles Auxiliary of the
Racine Firemen "met recently at the
firehouse .
Serving that day will begin at 11
a.m. with themenu to consist of
beans and cornb'read, vegetable
soup, sandwiches, pie, coffee and

pop. The dinner is open to the public.
Cressa Shain presided at the
meeting with Beulah Autherson
leading In the pledge to the flag and
Ruth Shain, the Lord's Prayer. The
group sang "Happy Birthday" to
RuihShain·.
Refreslunents were served to
those named and Oretha Snider,
Mae Cleland, Jean Johnson, Gene
Lyons and Aggie Boggess. Autherson ~~:on the door prize.

Middleport
Gardeners
A candelight installatioo of officers by Mrs. Clara Conroy who
used the theme "Let Your Light
Shine" highlighted the Wedoesday
night meeting of the Middleport
Amateur Gardeners at the home of
Erma Smith.
Installed were Erma Smith;
president; Mrs. Katie Swanson, vice
president; Mrs. Veda Davis, secrtary : and Miss Bernice Ann Durst,
treasurer. Each of the new officers
was presented a candle which was
lighted by Mrs. Daisy Blakeslee as

were .gi~ ~v~-

nuu
as
Robm
Mrs. Conroy gave the charge,
Campbell
waa
a·
guest.
Mrs.
Lohse
Holiday actlvltiea including the
won the traveling prise.
ChrlstmaB flower allow, tile llRhting
ccnteat. and • party were dllc•ed.
en1
Tile county Cbriatmaa lbow will be
b
held Nov. 28 and 29 at Royal Oak
Hemlock Grange 2049 met Satlll'.
Park and to help with the upense!J,
day night at the home of Mr. and
the club will send a dollar per memMrs, Roland ..,......,.,n
"'·-· with Eaatber to the county treasurer.
man,newmasler,presiding,
Again this year the club will oo. ed
· Tile 17 mem bers preoent enjoy a
sponsor the Christmaa decorating
chill supper. Plans were made for a
contest In Middleport with the Mid~ In the
turkey Supper at 6 P·"~
dleport Garden club. Named to the · Hemlock Grove &lt;llw-ch basement
at
lighting c&lt;in~e~~t conunittee were
'"'• Tile dime
the Novem ber rnee-..,.
Miss Smith, Mrs. Marjorie Fetty,
march brought In $11.06. It was
,
Mrs, Daisy Blakeslee, and Mrs.
installed at
oted that offtcers
were
Elizabeth Lohae. On Nov. 2% the .nthe Rock. Springs
Grange in 1J. joint
members will tour the Bo-Ka-Woods
installation ceremony on Oct. 8.
candle and gift shop at Lancaster.
MabeiLeewasreportec!illThe Region 11 Ohio Association of
The literary program Was P-~~
&amp;~.Garden Clube fall meeting W!IS anted by Margaret Haning with a
nounced for Oct, 31 at Eastem High
guessing game being won by Sylvia
School. Fernwood and the Amateurs
Midkiff. There was a quiz on the
will have charge of the coffee hour, 9 Bible won by Bob Reed, and several
to )0 a.m. Several members plan to readings including "Smile a Poem"
·
~ttend.
by Rosalie Story, "Country Fair" by
A thank you note was read from
Helen Qulvey: "Theme in Yellow"
Ellen Bell for the nlagazihe,
·by
Goldie Reed, and "My Mother's
"Flower and Garden" Which was
Checkered Apron" by Rosalie story.
placed in the Middleport library. A
report was given by Miss Smith oo
VefVleW
the county meeting attended by Mrs.
Davis' and Mrs. Fetty who was inTill! Riverview PrO recenUy e~
stalled as county contact chairman. dorsed the school iBIIues which will
Endorsement of the tuberculosis be on.the ballot In the Eastern Local
levy renewal was given by the club.
School District in November.
Committees appointed were Miss
Richard Roberts, superintendent,
Durst and Mrs. Elizabeth Burkett, explained the iBIIues In detail to the
civic; Mrs. Beulah Strauss, Mrs. PTO. also endOrsed by the group
Lillian Moore, publicity; Mrs. Fetty, were the MeigB County tuberculosis
Mrs. Conroy, Mrs. Moore, Mrs.
levy, a renewal, and the Emergency
Swanson, and Mrs, Strauss, mem- Medical Service levy.
bership; Mrs. Swansoo, Mrs. Moore,
It was noted that the school carMrs. Blakeslee, Miss Smith, Mrs. nival was a success. Marlene PutRose Reynolds, flower show; Mrs. man, president, extended thanks to
Burkett, Mrs. Swanson, telephone;
those who helped, Mrs. Well's first
Mrs Davis, scrapbook, and Mrs. grade won the room prize of flO for
Jean Moore, Kathym Hysell, Mrs. having the highest percentage of
Nina Bland, and Mrs. Fetty, ways parents in attendance. Readings
and means.
relating to .Columbus Day and
The Christrrias party will be held
autumn were presented by Sandy
at the home of Mrs. Fetty with Ms.
Cowdery and Cathy Spencer. The
Davis, Mrs. Crooks and Mrs. Pratt "library magazine subscriptions
as assiSting hostesses. The program
were renewed for another year.
will be by.Mrs. Blakeslee. For roll
Mary .Rose gave a report on
call members are to give Christmas
current cutbacks In the schoolluhch
memories. There will be a gift ex- progrwn as well as requirements
change with the wrappil\gs to be
that are to be met.in school menus
judged.
seved in the cafeterias. .
Miss Smith and Mrs. Gladys CumMrs. Grace Weber aMounced that
mings, co-hostesss, served re!resb- students will not be in classes on Oct.
m~nts with the table appointments
26 due to an irHlervice day for
carrying out the fall motif. Chest- teachers.

H

'

PTQ

~=~~Ann~• ~a.':~U

Francis Haggy, Lawrence
Hr,sell, Jr. Shirley Olddle,
R ck Hyse1I, Ida Smedley,
William Hysell ancl Bob
Hysell, will lake notice that

r9'aJ""Ia'6t~~~la'r'ntOiJ"'r.\i

Rea Estate to Pay Debts
was flied In the Probate
Division of the common
Pleas Court of Meigs Coun-.
tv, Ohio; wherein you have
been named defendants
prayln~ for the sale of the
entire tnterest in the real
estate
hereinafter
described In order to pay
the debts of the Defendant,
Howard L, Searls! and the
costs of admln stratlon.
The real estate is described
astollows:

A regular feature prepared by
the American Cancer Society, to
help save your life from cancer.
Queation: Are vitamins useful
in treating cancer?
ANSWERiine: Vitamins are
chemicals that the body requires
for metabolism. They are absorbed primariy from food . They
help perform the thousands of
chemical reactions that convert
food into energy. Scientists only
partially understand some of the
roles vitamins play in the growth
and development of cancer. In
certain cases, vitamins seem to
inhibit the cancer-causing activity of other chemicals. Researchers have also found cSses in
which a class of vitamins completely blocks the deveioment of
cancer. However, many unscientific claims have been made
for cancer ~herapy involving the
use of massive doses of vitamins.
One should beware of the excessive use of vitamins, as some
can be toxic and some overdoses
can even be fataL Consult your
doctor about their use.
Question: Is ft risky to have a
marmnogram?

ANSWERiine: The risk-benefit
ratio of low-dose l)l8rmnograph is
favorable. In the view of noted
radiologist Dr. PhillpStrax, "It's
a matter of degree and comparison: Probably safer than to
cross against the lights on your
way to the exam; probebiy safer
than to smoke a cigarette to cabn
your nerves. And·it's surely S4fer
than NOT having a mammogram
and running the risk of breast
cancer being detected too late."
Question: Is there an effective
,test of cancer of the womb
(uterus)?
ANSWERline: Yes. It involves
inserting a probe into the uterine
cavity. The traditional way was
to do a "D and C," which involved
stretching the cervic and
scraping the uterus . This
required an anesthetic and an
overnight stay in the hospitaL
Now there is a probe, devisect'in
Derunark, which iB attached to a
suction cup to aspirate the contents of the uterine cavity. The
procedure can be done In a doctor's offi~ without anesthesia
and with minimum discomfort to
the patient.

Question: I have beard that
someone treated for tonsililia
with X rays during childhood
could develop thyroid cancer In
later life. Is this true?
ANSERI!ne: A link recently
has been established between
tumors of the thyroid gland appearing in adults and x-ray treat. menta they received in childhood
or adolescense. In the early 1920's
and 1930's, X-rays were used to
treat many noll-&lt;!ancerous conditions of the bead and neck.
Now, years later, tumors are
showing up. Many are benign, ·
Even when malignant, they
usually remain limited ·to the
neck for many years and can be
successfully removed by
surgery. Although thyroid
tumors develop in only a !pllllll
percentage of the persons who
received irradiation when they
were young, anyone who received
it must be considered at risk for
thyroid cancer and should be
aware of the possibility when
seeing a physician or clinic for a
cancer checkup.
For further questions call 9927531.

Carl Schwarz, Jr. at Mason and with
other relatives.

Fla.,

Phone
H6'14l-99N325
COUNTRY - 'i\'111 take
troller In on this home.
Nice large modern kifsize bedrooms, bath, full
basement ancl large lot1
$30,000.
MOOE RN - Can YOU
beat a heat b11dget of
$17.50. This 4 bedroom

'I

Mn. Ronald (LGu) Carpenter II to
undergO furthl!r IIIJllel7 Ill '('bun.
day at Cbarleaton Mamori1l
Hospital, 3300 . Noyer Ave.,

-lin. . .

JIII,PiwwoyR.D,
,
Mr.
II CUimla,
Pllm llullar, 11'111,. Clllld Cll Mr.
ad .,._ Roy anty 'l'llunday

" nl•w.

CALL:

POMEROY

BOOGS

LANDMARK

SALES &amp; $ERVICE

"4-992-2181
For Farm and
Home D~iivery . of
Gas ' - Diesel
Heating Oil.

U.5. Rt. ~II Eilsl
Guy~ville, Ohio
Autttorirf'd ..1onn t&gt;t!ere.
hll:!w Holl•nd, Bu sh Hog

Let
George Miller
check your present eltc·
lrlcal system.
·
Re·s idential
&amp; Commercial

Dealer.'
FARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS&amp;SERVICE
USED EQUIPMENT

Call 742-3195

10-7-1 mo. •

.

ALL STEEL

Farm Buildings

story 8 room home.
Natural gas fUrnace,
carpeting,
spacious
rboms. Basement and

"From 30x30"

SMALL

Si&amp;es from 4d to 12d0 •

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

STUART WAYNE
PULLINS

3

Nearly

bedroom

home. Elec. baseboard
heat, modern bath, lots

Rl. 3, Box 54
Ph, 614-143-2191
• 6·15-tfc

storm drs. and windows.
Riverview tot. $32,500.

• Excavating

• Septic Systems
eWater, Sower &amp;
Gas l..lnts

eDumpTruck
• Tren,her
l..icensed &amp; Bonded

Call Alter 4 P.M.
992-7656

Racine. Oh",

of carpeting, Insulated,

eBackhoe

ANO CUSTOMIZING

.

Utility Buildings

doors and windows on
large lot.
private

'

A:e-Btue and Re-Finish
Restock, parts, etc .
Buy Guns 10%
Above Wholesale

large. lol. Modern kitchen {equipped), storm
POMEROY -

.

Ph. 992·7201

10-9-1J"O·

5·21-tfc

IN THE WOOOS Alone and quiet with all

utilities. Cedar
closets, washer -dryer
room, natural uas forced a ir furnace. This
place Is for you. JUST

61&lt;

Clerk of Courts
Meigs County
Common _Pleas Court
14, 21, 28, {11) 4, 11, lB.

;-----------------~--·--·-·4

l

Curb Inflation
l·
Pay Cash for
! Claulfleds and
I
Savelll
.
- · .

Pick From

'12~

vou

.,.,

sq. yd.

sq. yd. installed

MAIN Sl.

142 2211

WANT
AD INFORMATION..

get

41

1--t• M•mor~m

42- Mobfi•Hom11

._.,.

6-LUt HCI flllnct ..

7-·YIJ1illtl

47-w..,..,. l~r~t

~--~~·~

4-- Equipmhtfor . . .,
49-FCH' L••u

&amp;Aucfl•

eMERCHANOISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Sl-AntiCiut&amp;
S4--MIK. ~cltlltlllat
U-Bulldt•• hp,ll•s
M-Pttl lor Sl~

11-H..pWtntei
12-Jitull.... WIMH
11--I.. WIIIC.
14-l•thtnl Tr•lntnt
11--Sclloeltln&amp;t.-uctlon

57-Mniclltnurum.nt
11--Frulh &amp; V~t~tatH••

]t-R1IIIG. TV,

It-For liM or lrNt '

lt-W•nflld To Do

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

e FINANCIAL

18.
19,-----_ _ __

~"""

2,_,,.........

20. _

l ------'--'---

21.
22---~-23. _ _ _ __

11-HoftlltMrS.M

24.

IS-FirM,._SI~

25.

61--LiYI&amp;hld:

n-MMIYIOLNfl

1.....::::'-----

---o---=--

.,_,lrlrl EqutPIMflt
n-wanl• to luw

21-Butiftftl

Salt
M-"IY &amp; Gro~in .
u---s-.t a F•rlililtr

llf"vtcn

eRI!ALES:r4TE

•TRANSPORTATION
11--Au,..'*rS.II
72-_fr.O:Ifwl•t•
7;a.---VaM &amp; • W.D. '
74--Meklrcyetn
7J-. . .h . Mntr&amp;

.....

H-Me~M..~"'"'"
1"-IVl!Mtt IIM..inp

,9. _ _ _ _ __
10, _ _ _ __

28. _ _ _ __

11.
12, _ _ _ _ __
13. _ _ _ _ __

29. - - ' - - - - 30. ' - ' - - - - - - -

31, --'-':--__;_
32.

:u.

:w.
u.

the Smallest
Hea,ter core to the
L•rgest Radiator~

Fram

Radiator Sptclallst
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Exparlonct

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC'

Mason, w. ViL

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph, 992-2174

10·8·1 mo. pd.

Fullv Guaranteed

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

.-Add•••
ond
riM\Odellng

DEAN'S AUTOMAnC

=i. .

SERVICIS

,,-...._,,.,.,.........
a Me•tlftw

TuitiRyltii'IIPr...r11.JO.M,

lriCal&amp;

~2 : 011ftiiJUrdfly

,... ..¥ .........~.... •
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u, .. ,•..,.. ,.. ...,...,
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742-2003

Georges . Hobstetter Jr.
Broker

NEW LISTING COUNTRY
LIVING
CLOSE TO TOwN -

Fine A bedroom home, 2
baths , living . room,
famiy room with woodburner, kitchen has
built-in Corning range
and oven.
Double
garage, all situated on
appro"K. 1V2 acres off
New
Lima
Rd .

S-45,500.00.
OWN-ER FINANCING

- Qualified _buyer with
small dOwn payment.
pavments of $215 .00 mo.
at 10%. you can own this
solid bu i It l'h story
home on Unien Ave . Has
3 bedrooms, bath, liVing
room, kitchen, full basement, large back yard .

Sells for $26,500.00.
EXCELLENT BUY -

This 3 bedroom home,
bath, living room, kitchen and dining comb.
in
R uti and,
On I y

$10,000.00,
1980 LIBERTY -

2

'NEW PHONE NO.

992;6259
276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio
9-21-lfc

home. 'Asking $9,500.00.
ELEGANCE
IN
SECLUSION

Evervthing you could
ask for and more is included in this beautiful
two story, 4 be&lt;lroom,
21f"l bath dream home.
situated on 2 acres Of
nicely wooded property.
The refreshing swimming pool is 18'x.42' with
diving boar:-d and · slide.
Ther,e are so many
desirable features thai
it's lmRQsslbfe to cal)-·
ture them all in this ad.
Call for your private
showing .
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.

Ph. 742-3092

· Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

Ph, 742·3171 •

WANTED TO BUY
'
SCRAP
(Pomeroy Scrap
Iron
&amp; Metal)
- Now picking up junk
auto bodies. Top prices
paid for auto bodies,
~erap iron and metals.
1 mile west of Fair·

gr0&lt;1nds on Old Rt. 33.

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

E. Mai11W
POMEROY,O.
992-2259
NEW CISTING

After Aug.3
Ph. 992-6564
10·121fc

Building or trailer lots
near Rutland. Appx . 11f..
acres. Asking S3,500 .

VInyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

REDUCED- This outstanding quality home
hftS 3- bedrooms, llh
baths, dining room.
finished basement with
familY room, office. and

BISSELL
.SIDING CO.

utility. Now$49,900.

THiRTY-SEVEN ACRES.- OVERLOOKING
THE OHIO RIVER -

"Beautiful, custom
Built Glr. .ts"

Most are woocted with
gOOd srand of White Oak

Call for frN tiding
tstlmatll, 949-2101 or
949-2160.
No Sunday Calls

trees . A hunter's
. paradise. AlSo has two
houses, and many other
outbuldings. The main
hOuse has 5 rooms 8. 2
bedrooms. $26,900.

3·

Transmission Specialist
Rebuilts·Repairs
Seat Jobs
Open Sat. &amp; Sundays
Located 5 miles north of
Albany on 611. on lhe
Date Scoff Farm.

*

664-6310

If no Ans. call 742·2070
10·8·1 . pd .

'· !STANDARD
OIL CO.
fSOHIO)
We are now serving all

of Meigs co. with
Heating 011, Diesel

supreme.
Gasoline,
comlete
line
of
Lubricants for the
Iarms &amp; Industry.

.

PH.m-341G

If lonl diltiRCI, Clll Col-

ltcl:

LltrY E. Miller, DMI•r

8·30·1 mo.

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

-Just A ys. old, with an
equipped
kitchen,
garage, 3 bedrooms,
dining room, Iaroe batt!

•Dryoon

and lull basement. Nice

V_C. YOUNG Ill
9t2-ltllsorm-731 ,.
'-ow.OWo
t -30-lfc .

J&amp;R
TRASH SERVICE
Box u, POrtland, Dh.
Ph.MHt12
15,10 Monthly
S.rvlllt 1111 lollowlnt
townshlpa: 1.tillnon,
SUtton. Lllort, _Oliva,
Ora...., SollaiiUry, BilltoN, . Chellv, S.tem,

Scipio,
Rutt•n•.
Harrt-vllle 11141 MICJ:

·~·

!~?;'~~ 1 ,

atfot Water Tanks

SPECIAL. Deer slugs, rem .
12 gauge, 25 per bo&lt;, $9.9'7.
Spring Valley Trading Co.,
Spring Valley Plata, 4468025.
Arthritis?

High Blood
Problem Skin?
Nature's Aloe Products
really work! Also exercise
rebounders. -446·2847.
~ressure?

Sanders Ceramics St. Rt.
218. O~n Mon. &amp; Tues.

7:00PM till 9:00 PM. Call
256-6265,
The Trading Post 92 01 ive
St ., Gallipolis open lOtoS, 6
days a week. New glass top
dinette $350., couch S.f.S,
refrigerator freezer S6.S,
oak wardrobe SlS{), glass
show case $125, 1£616 carpet new SlOO, walnut bed
$85, acorn poster bed SlOO,
72 Chev. PU $200, desk S25,
wringer washer, chest of
drawers.
dresser,
television, bOX spring• &amp;
mattress, end tables and
coffee tables. ..
Register Mother-in-law she
cou ld win an arrangement
for Mother-in -law's Day.
Dudley's Florist drawing
Oct. 24th.

TOMORROW-on
Box.'

9-5-tfc

'Chatter

broaclcast

over

WYPC and WJEH , Dene
Wagoner will select two
'half' cards that together
wifl form the six of diamon-

CRAIG KARGES
MAGICOFTHEMIND

For bulk deliverv of
gasoline, heqting oil and
diesel fuel, call Landmark,
992 -2181, Pomeroy, Otl.

You •1 I
tract it down
much faster
with •

WANT AD

Gun Shoot Rac.lne Gun
Club. Every Sun . starting
at 1 p.m. Factor'{ choke
guns only .

TRAPS and TRAPPING
sup pi ies. Gene Hines,
Amesville, Ohio. 614·44867.f7. Dailv after 1 p .m .
R:acine Vol. Fire Dept.
sponsors a shotgun &amp; rifle
match everv Sat. night at
6:30p.m. at their building
at Bashan. Factory chCHc:e
12 guage shotgun &amp; open
sight 22 rifles.

COMPLETELY REMODELEO an4 IS
Qorgeous with . 2
btclrooms. large living

ApPles, Honey and Sweet
Cider. Grimes, Romes,
Gal., and Red Delicious,
Staymen Winesap. S5.25
per bushel and up. Cheaper
In volume. Fitzpatrick Or-

chard, SR689, Phone 614·
669·3785,

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

NO hunting &amp; trespassing
on Bright McCausland
Fl!lrm operated by Wool han
Farms.

P~oroe

1-304-67,5-4154.

No Hunting or Trespassing
on former
Ferguson Wl!llkup farm, back of west
Columbia, WV. Violaters
will be prosecuted by
owner.
Mountaineer Shop, Henderson, wv. Hound supplies anQ cold beer to go.
Specials. Open daily .
Mrs. Beckv Reed, Ex·
perienced
Inst ructor,
Baton Corps · &amp; Private
Piano.
Now scheduling
students, contact her-116
Mayo Drive, Box 185 New
Haven. wv 25265.
No Hunting or Trespassing
on Howard Hickle farm at
Hartford. WV.
Giveaway

4
ANY

PERSON

WhO has

anything to glye away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad in this
column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser.
1 yr . old female Co11ie. Call

4&lt;62805
6, 6 wks. old Border Collie
&amp; Chinese Chow puppies.

Call388·9354.
1 black male kitten. Call
4-04·~152.

Chest of drawers, clothing
and many other item s. Call

446·9528,

Mother and 3 puppies to
good home. Mother snow
white part Husky-Poodle.

Call 245-5089.

2 male' dogs. I poo~i'lo 8.
peke. mixed, two years did.
Other black &amp; tan part
Beegle, 5 years old. Loves
children. Rutland-Harriso·
nville Rd. John Lambert
KITTENS, 2 gray and
white, long hair, 1 black
and white, 1 mixed colors.
phoneJ0-4·895-3619 .

3882.

.

WANT TO BUY Old fur·
n ltvre and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain.
256-1967 in the evenings.
CASH PAl D for clean, late
moelel used cars. Smith
Buick -Pontiac. GAllipolis.
Ohio. Call -446-2282.
Junk cars with or with out
motors, scrap metal, and

BUYING GOLD &amp; SILVER
paying cash for anything
stamped lOK. lAK, 18K and
dental gold . Cl5JSS rings,
wedding rings, sliver coins
or
anything
stamped
sterling .. Clarks Jewelry
Store. Gallipolis 4.46-2691 or
992-2054 in Pomeroy .
Bl.lying
Gold,
Silver,
Platinum, old coins, scrap
rings &amp; s-ilverware. Daily
quotes availab le. Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sate. 446-8025,4.46-8026.
wanted to Buy : Antique
dolls, lamps, furniture;
rugs, pictures, jewe lry.

Phone 525-0436.

BE OS· IRON, BRASS, old
furniture, go ld , si l ver
dollars, wood ice boxes,
stone iars, antiques, etc .,
comp lete
households.
Write : M.D . Miller, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy, Oh . Or 992-776/J.

992-2143

Mlsctlllneous

17

Eleanor or ~bbie . Serving ..
for all occasions, also mending and alterations. 10 am
- 5 pm. Monday thru·
Friday . 3301 Robinson
Avenue. corner of Jackson
and
Robinson.
Pt .
Pweasant .

Female

1-----------1 LOST· male . blue
30.4-882-3328.

Yard Sale, Oct. :n, 23, 24,
weaver's, 642 Mill St., Mid·

d~ !pOrt. Baby &amp; children's
clothes, gas floor furnace,
kltehe,.. sink 8. cabinets,
misc. elothes 8. other
Items.

Roger &amp; Donie Tumer

992-5692
Olflct 992·2259

•-

" Ynu · \'f~'

.,

..

Mol a run in

~uur

would like trash hauling.
Any odd jobs. Farm work,
wOOd cutting. Call 992· 7803 ..
Will do any Odd job,
general
house
main tenance. Have e)(per- ience
with carpentry, plumbing,
and electrical, al so some .
appliance repair. Call 675-

3no "'
Steve .

21

675·5918 ask ror

Business
Opportunity

own your own Jean Shop.
Offering all the natiohally
known brands such as Jordache, Vanderbilt, Clavin
Klein, Sedgefield, levi,
and over 70 olher brands .
$12,500.00. includes begin ·
ning inventory, airfare for
1 to the apparel center,
training , fixtures , and
Grand
Openi'ng
Promot i ons . Call Mr .
Kostecky at Mademoiselle
Fash ions 612·432-0676.

NEED MONEY?. I need

3476.

furniture . New, usel:f or antique. Also buying glass,
china, gold, Silver, coins,
watches, chains, etc . Mar·.
tin's General Store, Mid·

dleport, Ohio. 992·6310.

Scrap metals, batteries,
radiators. ginseng. vellow
root. and merchandise
brokerlng. Yarper-Halste·
ad Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street. 675-5868.
Also Flea Market open
daily . Open
MondayFriday 1-5 pm .
WANTED to purchase anv
type of ex-military vehi cle
or vehicular equipment.
Contact Donald G. Barber
Jr. Box 1572, ParKersburg,
WV 26102 or call 30-4--422-

1709.

Krautter {3041675·3413.

23

Professional
Se(vices

Piano tuning and re1=1alr,
Love your neighbor tune
your Piano. Bill Ward,
Wards Keyboar'd . .446-4372,
GallipOl is.
HARPER Adult Care Center -providing the personal
care vour elderly need in a
home like atmosphere.
vacancies now availible.

eall304-675·1293.

~-u.::;;;:::-;;:::-=::-­
3~'1_-:'H-"o"m
"e-,s:..:l.:::or,_S:::a,_,l"'e__

New 3 bdr. house with
garage and lull basement

S-45,11!l0. Owner will help
finance. Call .446-0390.

Need extra money for
Xmas? Sell Avon. Call -446-

3358.

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
sOme great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

the ellgibil ity list at 9922156 or 992·2157.
Wanted -Older lad~ to
llvein . light housework
and cook ing. 992-3704.
LPN or RN for p~ivateduty
nursing tor male patient at
Pinecrest Care Center. 11

7=::::::;;;;:=.;=::;:::==~=
12
Situatians Wanted

·- =----=====;=:_

Ellm Resthome. Care for

7~----~
Y~a~rd~S~a~l=e_____

TV service calls . Call 9922034. Also used color TV for
sale.

Columbus First Mortgage
Company FHA -VA Financing Loan Rep . Cookie

diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 .50 per ton. Bundled
slab. 510 .50 per ton .
Deliverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
Rock
Springs
Rd. ,
Pomeroy . 992-2689.

p.m.·7a.m. 304-675·1524, or
lick, 675·5941.

v I c I n It y
M c D a n i e IS
Slaughter House, rewand,

256-6219 . .

Gold, silver , sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
curren cy. Ed Burkett Bar ·
ber Shop, Middleport. 992 ·

CHIP WOOD . Poles max.

black

Phone a.o-2354.

an additional traner lot.
$21,000.
REALTOR
Honry 1!. Clelond, Jr.
.
992-6191
Jun Trussell 949-2660

Wanted to Do

Would like to do babysit·
ting ROdney -Cora area .
Cafl379·2706 anytime.

OWN your own Jean Shop.
Offering all the nationally
known brands such as Jor·
dache, vanderbilt, Calvin
K lein, Sedoetield, Levi and
ewer 70 other brands.
$12,.500.00 includes beginning inventory, airfare for
1 to the apparel center,
training. fixtures and
Grand
Opening
Promotions . Call Mr .
Kostecky at Mademoiselle
Fashions 6 12·432-0676.
;;===;;:=::~:77:
22
Maney ta Loan

Need
pari
tirrie
housekeeper ·child setter.
ORANGE tiger kitten with 30 to 50 yrs. old preferred.
lit1er box . Trained. 304-675- Crown City area. Call 2569327, evenings after 5,
44«.

beagle. Lost in Old Town
Flats area near Portland.

carport, large lot with

Wanted to Buy

5314.

LOST :

LAFF-A-DAY

9

11

Female collie, to gOOd
home in country Or on
farm, had shots, needs
bOoster, been spayed. 675-

IN · ··

SURANCE
been
can - ,
celled?
Lost
your
operelor's License?. Phone,

Auction. Thursday 7 pm .
1976 ¢hevrolet Impala, air.
ps, disc brak~s. automatic, Will do sewing in my home.
current sticker , gOOd tires,
Br-idle, costume, suits, &amp;
body fair. Plus other new acces. Call Becky Brown
and used consignments. 379-2560.
Sale every Thursday 7 pm
at MI . Alto Auction Sales, I ~;;;,;;;:;;-;;;:-;;;;:;.:;;;:;:;,--;;;;;~
Ken Cole, Auctioneer.
~~to do general house
cleaning, eXperienced . Call

4 month old part Irish Setter, LabrAdor Retriever·
red, 5 baby kittens. 895-

3825.'

-

Public Sal~
&amp; Auction

batteries. Call388-9303.

October Special. Furniture
Upholsterlng·25 percent off
on labor. 1 month only.
Mowrey's
Upholstery .

FOUND : Ring. Owner may
claln by Identification.
Found In Pomeroy. 98.5·

room, enclosed porch,

J..f '*-I lOll

Announcements

·~--~L~os~l~a~n=d~F~o~un~d~-­
FOUND: Pair of eye
glasses in blue case. Can be
claimed at Dally Sentinel ,
Office, Pomerov.

$29,900.
ALMO&amp;T NEW RANCH

lB

AUTOMOBILE

1• .

1 - - - - - ---:-----1 4

large level lot. Now
reduced to $39,900.

· e()lshwoahen

SEASON

pet. All on 2 corner "lots.

PARTSANDSERVICE
ALL MAKES
•Washers

1

EARLY

lor you . Ills a 5 room
one story Ira me home
with new storms, new
Insulation, and new car·

_ Piumbirtgond
electrial work
(FrH E•timotes)

985·

TRAPPER: We have a com·
plete line of trapping supplies. Traps, dye, wax, ancl
lures.
Spring
Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, 446-8025 . ·

- Are11you
energY conscious?
so
this could be the home

_ Roofing o,ccgutler

_C=ret work

I

KHp This Ad tor

FvturoRolo.--o

TERS . come In and
register now for our Big
Buck
Contest . Spring
Valley Trading Co. , Spring
Valley Plaza, 446-8025 .

ds.

Coil Ken Young
For Foal Service

1f-CIIfiJI. . Ictu. . . .t

Want-All MvM'tlslnl
Dt. .Untl · '

1

5-7·11c

22Yrs. EKperien~e
American and Mosl
Foreign Cars
Transmission Exchange

~wing

ATTENTION DEER HUN -

~~~;;::;;=~~=====~~~;~======~§~~~SYRACUSE
f.

71--.t.IIIIR.,.Ir

_

-.n Tnta Coup an wlti!RemiHanct
· Tilt Dill¥ ltltiMI
111 Clllrt •••

COMPLETE
' , RAOlll TO~
SERVICE

Ph. 304-773-5131

AcCftMrll'

27.

tensive remodeling.
• E leclrica I work
•Roofing work
14 Years
Experience
·1
GregR.o ush
Ph. 99'2:1513
10·2-1 mo .

• Remodeling
eAiuminum&amp;
Vinvl Siding
• Kitchen Cabinets
• Awning
• Roofing
• Painting

7a-a•~•rtl&amp;

26,

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex-

D&amp;M •·
CONTRACTORS

sl-Htu ..heNOOOit
S2- CI, !V, IMlo l"'l'"*lt

&amp;Cah,.lr

17.

4J-.Fur*tlttcllltoorn 1

4t--SjNu lor JtNt

,_WI-'" tt lilY

Thetecashrates
include discount

-f4-Aper1Mtnt' for REnt

9·2A1 mo.

•· ROUSH

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH:tt2-6011
992-7656
8·20-tfc

-wou... lor llttnt
llrRut

Buuty SMJ.

custom kitchens and a·ppliances,
custom
bathrooms, re~Ttodeting,
plumbin, electric, and
heating.

eRENTALS

I-Card of T111nk&amp;

Appolntm•nh
no1 o~lw.1y1
ftKtiHry. Fomnrt"t Kut-n-Kurl

CONSTRUCTION

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Used Color TV Sets tor
Sale.

PHONE 992-3021

C. R. MASH

Or Write Daily Sentit1el Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

eANNOUNCEMENTS

Union Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio

conductors
All types of -batteries &amp;
Chargers.
PHONE 992-2276
9-2•
Brodbu Rood
1 mo .

PHONE· 992-2156

Addren-----------------

W.eds. 10:oo-8:00
Thurs. 11:00-1:00
Fri. lO:OG-5:00

**Tubes,.
Topa Deck&amp;
Simi-

'•

HARRISON
1V SERVICE
NOW .
OPEN

New Hours:
Man. 11 :OQ-7:00
Tues.ll:G0-5:00

*Automobile Radios

,.

Call Collect
9-21 -1 mo .

'

*MooHng
(both
telescoping &amp; tower)
** ComP.&lt;Jinent
Systems
Portable Radios

811&lt;1,

machine repair, parts, and
~lck up and
supplies.
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call
4-04·0294..

bedroom. 1 bath mobile

If long Distance,

Stylists: Mark Mora
and Cindy' Cuthbertson.

•Aneen~a•

Savf! A Lot

992-3460

HAIR REMEDIES

* Televi1ion1

Buy Now&amp; Save$2-$6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed, carpet installed free
w.ith pad. Good selection Roll Ends Remnants 52.50 up.

RUTLAND FURNITURf

Phon•---~-------------

FRANCE
ELECTRONIC
SUPPLIES

Good sele(tion of carpet thru the 30th of Octo.b er.

we are now delivering
home heating oi' in 111
parts of Me~gs co. We
want new c~tomers .
Larry E. Miller·Dealer

Middleport, Ohio
9-20-1 mo.

1-1-1 tfc

For October

(SOHIO)

PH, 992-2725
169 N. 2nd

Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 317-7110

'12•
, sq. yd.

Now $17.50
f;llow S22.50
Now $27$
Now $29.50

KAY'S .
BEAUTY SALON

Countv Cerllllid

I Blue Frost ·
I Creek Bed

.
.
,
.

lHE STANDARD
OIL CO.

wave Lenfth For
Longer Hair

Roush Line

Cash-n·Car.ry
1 Green Tweed
1 A ust Tweed -

Drive l\ Littlr•

Nama _____.;...._____

Pom•ov• 011..417"

Housing
Headquarters

GET READY FOR WINTER
SHAG·CARPE UBBER BAC
3 ROLLs
.3 Rolls to

$20.00
$25.00
$30.00
$35.00

Water-Sewer-Electric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line.. ook·ups
Septic Tlrik·s

FALL CARPET SALE

Write your own ad and order by mall with this

2. _ _ _ _ __

Teaford, Sue
~urphy
and Helen
Teaford. ·

RuUand Fumiture Carpet Shop

ALL BRAND N·Ew IN BOXES
TOYS- TOYS- TOYS- and MISC.
Hasbro, Mattei, Kenner, Barbie;
ToniCa Brands. Dolls, Baby Carriages,
Daisy Guns, Electronic Games, Balls,
Models and much, much more! Pienty
parking and good sea't ing.
TERMS: Cash or check with ID
Restaurant Open
Auctioneer: Herb Dawkins
App. Auctioneer: Rodney How.ery

coupon . Cancel your aa by phone when
· results. Money not refundable.
\

Helen

Public Notice

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALE BARN
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23 ~ 7:00 P.M.

*'il

$21,500,
ASSOCIATES

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice Is hereby given
that on Saturday, October

PERM SALE
SEPT, 21 thru OCT. 24

REESE
TRENQfiNG
SERVICE

SWEEPER

7 l He

,GUNSMitHING

Sizes

YARD sale, 105 Third Sl,
Wednesday
through
Friday . Lots ofct~thing .

Hollow 614·698·3290.

Announcements

3

r&lt;~Clor

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

sat. 9·5.

t-torses,
ponies, horse
frallen riding les!.Qns. Hoof

Picker

S&amp;W

2008 , Wed., Thurs .• Fri. and

992-2156

3

PRICED RIGHT.

~FICE

~tove. oas heater. tires.
clothing, copy machine and
mllch more. PhOne 949-

8

M00·3t3 1 Row N~w l dt.'il [Orn

2·8·-tfc

Landing. Sal. 24·Sun. 25,
9:30.
-

I ,

Tr ilcforwl Cab
MOD·•OlO Di esel J .,._D . l

Equip. plus Yard Sale Up-

per Rt. 7 at Flowerland
Florist ecross from Zlnns

'

services for fire lns.uranc:e
coverage in Gallla county
f« almost '
century.
Farm, home and personal
properly coverages are
available to meet In·
dividuel needs . Contact
Harry Pitchford, agenf."
Phone 4-04·1427,

In Mason Countv

1-.-No. 9600 Dieie l Ford
'

Side Walk Sale and Store

sign on Rt. 124, Franklin

1n Meigs county

446-2342

,11"' mile on Alice Rd.
Jeans ,
tops ,
Cl)ats.
chlldrens cloU'llng. Avon,
toys, d ishes, dresses, babY
clothes.

Garage
Sale .
Ronald
Beegle residence, 1 m"lle
east of Racine. Watch for

PLACE AN AD CALL

In G.1llia County •

Farm l:quipmcnf

Free Estimate
Ja,mes Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

garage. A family will fit
the blll.
RACINE - Nice l'h

{10)

16. ~----'-~

rvzces

large with 8 closets. Has

Larry E. SP-_encer

14.
.•_~
15, ---::--:-:
____

Opportunity

•

For all of your wiring needs.

elnsulation·
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows

city

··-----

Box 74t;

a large basement with

Chester
News :Notes

ClariCe

Vit1YI &amp;
Aluminum Siding

chen. furnace, 3 nice

'~!~lnlg
of beginning, con·
;~
4 acres, more or

~---

o.

POMEROY

Mlu.ER ELECTRIC
SE8VICE

IRGILB.SR. ~tA110~
216 E. Second StrHt

Rutfilnd, to-wit:
Beginning 62 rOds west of
the northeast corner of Sec;tion 8, Town 6, Range 1-4,
Ohio Company's Purchase,
thence west 20 rods; thence
SOUth 301f-t rods; thence
North 7131.1 degrees east 31
to county road; thence
3.-4112 degrees west 5
thence north t7
-~o.o;.._ west about 16 rods

··----7. _ _

send
resume
to
Veterans
Memorlll

Pomeroy, Ohio, 4S76_?.

Business·

ranch Is really neat and

FIRST CHRISTMAS SALE

Mason Co., W. Va.
.Area Code 304
&amp;7S- Pf . Pleasant
45ti- Leon
576- Appl c Grove
77J- Maso•·
882- New Haven
895-Letarf
9J7- Buffalo
TO

real estate situated lo the

4, 5.
______

992-7034

llOOMAIN

P,

AUCTION

446- Gallipolls
367 - Chesnire
JKB- Vinton
245 :...... Rio Grande
256- Guyan Dist .
643-Arabia Dis f .

Part Time
Exp. Medical
Transcriptionist
'
'

Hospital, P.

M(' igs co. Area COde
614
Y~'/ -Middleport
Pomeroy
YIIS- -chester
J4J- Portland
247- letart Falls
949-Racine
742- Rutland

614

Employer.

Stole of Ohio, County of
Meigs and Township. of

( )Wanted
( JFor Sale
&lt; JAnnouneement
{ )ForRenl

Htlp Wanted

Eq yal

5-Ha"" Ad'

Boynton . Beach,
visited her
liroth&lt;!r and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Carl .
By CLARICE AU.EN
Schwarz, Jr. at Mason and with.
The Ladles Auxiliary of the fire
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Spore and
other relatives.
department mel Wednesdily eVening
Arletta of East Liverpool, Ohio spent
..
at the firehouse. President Charlotte
a day recently with Mrs. Katie Baas. '· Mrs. Kenneth Ault visited recenUy Smith opened tile meeting with "The
with her sister and brother-in-law, Lord's Prayer." Rol) can was an•
Mark Gilkey of CliUon ha,&lt; Mr. and Mrs. Leater Johnaon at Clif- swered by each giving a reading.
enrolled at the Hobert Welding
ton.
The secretary's report and thO
School at Troy, Ohio.
treasurer's report were read alldapMr. and Mrs. Harry King of proved.. New cards have bc!en
Miss Dorothy Blake visited over
Marion, Ohio, Mr. and Mn. Thomaa receivejl and are for ule by the
the weekend with her mother, Mrs.
Reynolds, Jr. of Pl. Pleasant were membera. Dues and card money
Wilma Blake.
recent dinner guesta of Mr. and Mrs. were collected. A,fter the close of the
Landon Smith. Mrs. King, the for- business meeting, g&amp;me~ were .,.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanford Burns and
mer Catherine Reynolda, dall£hler joyed and refn!lhments Of ~pple
family of ,Columbus, Ohio visited
of the late Thomas J. Reynolds, Sr., cake with wliippad toppins, coffee
with his mother; Mn. Violet Burns
and former owner of the Ma,leltlc, and elder were served by Marcia
liVer the week~.
' recently attended a perflll'tlliiiCe on . Keller and Charlotte Smith to Opal
theMa,leltlcSiwboatltCinctillllll, • Wickhlm, Betty Newell, Opel
Mrs. Moille Fox returned to her
Ohio. Sbe wu we11-1rMwD for · EiclUger, Enne Cleland, "ergaret
home recently after vlslllng ber
playing the c:elllope on her father's !luiaty, Opel Hollon,
Allen
daughter, Mrs. Peggy Chambers at
boaL MrL Klnl was born and reared Inzy NeweU and Cleo Smith.
~
Midland, Pa.
on this fllllOII8 boat, so viBitblc this
Recent villton at the heme of Mr.
renovated old lhow boat wu 1 lillie and Mn. RGicoe Hollan .lave been ·
Mrs. Clinedd!l Austion of
like CGIIllni home. Tbll weiHmown Mr•. llld Mrs. Dan Dunlwl, pt_
Southside, W. Va. vlllled recenUy
sllowboat hu Ileal named to Plun•!; Mn. 1M flo!Jend ~
National Re111ter of lllltorlc W. VL; Mn. Robert ...,.Y 11J1.
with her aunt, Mrs. Laurene Lewta
at Clifton.
Places.
'
' .
dllllly, lad Mn. ·~

Gallia Co. Area Code

WANTED

HOMES
INCLUOE DELIVERY ANO SET UP

l-MnoUIICI"'Itfttl
4-GIYNRW

·Mason area personals--------~-Mr. and Mrs. James Rhoden of
Charleston, w. va.
Boynton Beach, Florida are visiting
her brother and wife, Mr: and Mrs.
Mr. and MrS. James Rhoden of

II

PRICESO~MOBILE

The following described

Cancer Answerline----

•

1971 SHULTZ 12x60 ...... !.'!'!'!~~!'! .. '6450
1974 CASTLE 12160•..••.• ?.~:~:': .. '6450
1971
BELMO"T 12165... ............ '7450
2 bedroom, balcony front kitchen.
1976 OAKWOOD 12x52 ............. '7395
Furnishe-d with centr~l air.
1976 ELCONA 10150 .. .'~:~:~.·;~?~:: ...~~450

heirs and

lOA

YOUR NUOS

I IDn ,

17 degr- wnt 99 . , ,
"*'&lt;:e south 73 dtgrees
wnt 10 feel I thence lOUth
17 devr- ust 99 feet;
thence
:14 degrees
_ , H'hsouth
feet; thence
north
mo deGrees ust to the
r.ace
beglnnll)ll, acre,
conolnil)llol one·thlrd
moreorless.
·
REFERENCE DEED :
Vol. 25!,. p~a· 55, Meigs
County """ t&lt;:ords.
You are ·roqulred to an·
swer the ComPlaint within
twentv-elght days after the.
last publication · of this
notice, namely, by not later
then the 2lrd day of
December I 1911. or
judgment by default wilt b&amp;
rendered against \'G&lt;I.
RuthSchartlger,
Administratrix
oflheEstateof
Howard DecL.See"asedrls,
FredW. Crow, Ill
Allorne~for Piainllfl
1~ 1 ~~ . &lt;21l 4' 11• 18• 25•
Public Notice
IN THE COURT .
OF COMMON PLEAS
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
=Uf&lt;Aet:.~H
SHARPPlaintiffs;

7
Yord Salt
Carport Sale Frld~y oc:t. 23, SANOY AND BEAVER In·
9 to 4. 2 miles from Vinton. 5urance Co. hiS offered

l:IIIHNified Pal(eN cot&gt;er the ·
fullmvinl( telvtJhnne exchanl(es •••

cot;:,r.oom, baluny front living room, centr•l air

thence norm :u do9rwnt n•h feet 1 thence ilarth

vs.
CHARLES WILLIAM
SEARLS, ET AL
Defen&lt;tants,
No. 23.270
PUBNOLICTAICTEIOBNYThe Defen&lt;tants Cherles
William. Searls, If living,
whose address is unk.-n,
the unk.-n . _... heirs,
·devisees, legatees, ad·
minlstrators, · executors
and/or assigns of Charles
William Surls, 11
deceosedL Ruth Schartiger
Stella &gt;pencer, Pearl
Searls, Norman Hysell,
Elmer Hysell, Cher111
Hysell, Nathan Hysell,
Cora Woodar'll Rosie

SIJTI)~Y

~972 BARON 12160.................. '7450

~==~~;,;~~~z:-r::::~P~u~M~Ic~N~o~H~H»~:::-~::~;:;:::.::::::~

lock Granne .

Ri

MOBILE HOMES
MODULAR TRADE-INS

handicapped, aged, or bed
patient. Temporary or
limited care. Or continuous
home with us. Equipped for

BY OWNER :

~

bdr., split·

level. !iving foam &amp; dining
room combination, eat-In
kitchen, lg _ family rm. , 2
112 baths, localed in Tara
Estates, Club house and
pool privileges, $75,000
firm . Kyger Creek School
District. Stiown by appt .
only call446-9403 .
.

- - -----·

3 bdr. home tocated at 123
Garfield Ave. 2 acres lot
runs from SR 7 to Ohio
River. Full basement. finished rec. room, · 2
fireplaces, 2 1(2 baths, con crete pooJ , new carpet and ·
paint. Will consider vour ·
property in tradel Owner
will consider financing
with $10,000 down and $500
per month. Call 446-1546 for·
an appointmPnt .

--

----~ ~- -

3 Bedroom home, 11h

-- --

,.

balh,
eat -in kitctwn, stove &amp;
refrig ., large living room
with f ireplace, lots of bOokcases, hardwood floors,
carpet in 4 rooms, large
air cond _, large
lolwi!·h link fence. Near
in town . Pr ice •

4-46·0929 .

FLORIDA REAL ESTATE
For sell or trade. 3 houses,
Jax, Florida appraised at

wheel ehalr. 742·2266.

$130,000.

Have board and 'room for

SllO,OOO or s.ell separately
or trade for acreage of
e&lt;:~ual value in Gallia Co.

Will

sell

for

elderlY or disabled. 992·
279-2700.
6022.

Yard Sale. October 21·24. Will babysit In my home. Farm House. 34 acre farm,
Joe Roua~. Leon Baden Rutland area. 2 or 3 tob. base, 2 barn~. 15 mi.
Road.
South of town. Call ~- 2.426.
children. 992-6124.

,,

�Pa

31

Homes for Sale

32

Over 26QO sq . ft. of liv ing
space. l acre la ndscaped

lawn, 2 car ga rage. la rge
sun deck &amp; m uch more. 446·

. 3199 .

For sale or r ent. M ovi ng
out of state can .give im·
mediate possession. 3 bdr.
hOme, doub le garage, on
almost 4 acres of
grou nd . Ca11245·5846.

flat

3 bed r oom house, 2 acres, 2

ba ths, faf11ily room . Full
basement, garage. 9419·
2079.
LEA D I NG Creek Park·
Nea r Rutl and features &lt;t
cabins· l 5 dev! ca mpsit es, 3

shelter houses, 2lf2 acr e
stoc ked lake, AL L on 12

ac reS ! Gorgeous land On'
p aved
r oa d .
$39,900.
PO SS IBL E
no d o wn
pa l/ m~nt" B a r g ain priced!
Owner wants quick sat e! !
55 acre fa rm -House .. bank
barn , nice la nd-Buildin g
tots, 1 acre and up. A ND in·

already platted for buildin g
lots. All adj ace nt Pomer oy
near intersect ion 7 &amp;. 33.
For mor e Information or
appointment call collect
Th al ma at Thel m a M ontgOmery Rea lt y, ln c. . l -6.14385-6740 or 385-7419.
By owner . N ice 2 bedroom
ran ch t ype over 3 car
gar age. $27,500. 13 pet . in·
terest availabl e. 949-2801 or
949·2667 .

Mobile Homes

for Solie
For those har d to fi nd
Mobile Home &amp; camper
part s and acc essories see
our large inventory . (We
carry Coleman F ur nace
Fitters ). At Rt . 124 M inersvill e, Kingsbur y HOme
Sales 1nc. or ca ll 992·5587.
1965 10x55 2 pedroom
Mobile Hom ~ f ur n ished .
7&lt;2·2400 .
~~--~--~

197 1 Oar ian 12 x 65, 3
bedroo m s. ·1912 Crow n
Haven, 14 x 65 w ilh 8 x 10
ex.pand o, 3 l;&gt;edroom s. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader l4 x 70, 3
bedr oom s. 1972 Nashau. 14
x 60, 2 bedroo ms. B 1/~ S
Sa les. Inc . 2nd and Viand
,sfs.. Pt . Pleasa nt, wv.
Phone 675-4424.
TWO r epossessed -m ob il~
homes. br and new 1 81
models, {previ ous dea ler
lost f loorp !an money) . Save
big SSSSS. Must sell qu ick ly.

vestor's drea m of SO acres

K &amp;. K Mobile Hom es
j:)t . Pleasant, WV

676·3000
M OB 1 L E home loca ted in
Ca mp Conley, extr a nice
and clean. phone JO.t-8953967.

US ED MOBI LE
576·2711.

HOM E.

1973 3 bedroom 14 x 70, un·
derpi_
nned . 675-4064 .

Large hi st or ic home on . 14 x 70 mobile hom e, 2
bea utiful corner lot . 6th
bedroom, fa mil y r oom,
and Main, Middleport. 992· central air, underp inned,
5593 ,
awn ings. 675·1121 or 6753987.
M i lton Road , Ca mp Conl ey.
2 yea r old , 3 bedroom
1973 Vi ctor ian 14 x 65, ex tra
house, fully carpet ed, with
w o odburnin g
n ice,
1- full and two and a half f ireplace. re ady to move in .
baths. yard landscaped
Phone '675·4544 fo r apwith lar ge ut il it y buildfng . poin tment .
Assume 8 112 percent loa n .
675-6275 .
1972 Schu ltz 12 x 65. 304-675·
2907.
Or r ent-3 bedroom fur ·
. nished hOme on Bud ChatM'ARTION,
2
tin Roa d on big level lot . 19 7 3
bedroom, large living room
. 576·2711
w ith w ood burner , 01'1 ren ted lot' $35. a month, 304·
~ 2 bedroom house on 1 acr e,
675·3030 or' 675-3431 .
2 miles ba ck of New Ha ven
on paved road, fully car1966 NEW Moon, part iall y
pe ted. self contained water
and septic syst em . 882-3267. •furni shed, neat and ni ce.
pr iced for quic k sa le, 304675·3030 or 675-3431 .
s andh il l
Road , Pt.
Pleasant, 3 bedrooms,. 1 1!2
MOBIL E home skirting,
baths, doubl e ga ra g e.
70x l4 f rom $220. t o $495.
owner will f inance. lm·
K '&amp;..lf ~~bi le Homes
mediat e occupancy . 675Pt. Pt ea.s.ant, wv
5617 .
675·3000

-----

HOU SE-M eadowbrook Ad ~
dition. 3 bedroom, f ami ly
room with firepla ce. central alr, basem ent . 304·67 5·
1542 .
Hunt ing Haven . 58 acres of
wood s and level open land
wi th sound 2 story house. 8
percen t f inanc ing . Leon,
Mason County . S45_,000. For
full
informai1on
Jim
Bevins, Old CQiony Co.
Realtors. 344-2581 or 343 6945.

55

Building Supplies

Building mater ials, block.
brick , sewel' pipes, w in·
dow s, lintel s, etc . Claude
Winters. Rio Gr ande, 0 .
Call245·5121 .
T weMy
gauge
m et a l
sheets. Enamel, por cela in
coated . Many bu i lding
uses. Will not rust. Sizes 4
fl . by 6f t.. $5.60. 4 fl . by 10
fl ., $7 .00, 4 fl . by 12 fl .,
$8 .00 . Tuppers Plains ,
Ohio. 614·667 -3085 or 614667-33()2 .
32

Mobile Homes
·. for Sale

T R I- STATE
MOB I LE
HOME S. Gallipolis. Year
end sale, pr ice reduced,
used mobile homes. CALL
«H572.
NEW LI STING 63x l2 - Vin ·
dale wi t h 7x 12 expando
living room . L ike new inside and out. carpet ed
throughtout. like new wood
burner. silver top awn ing, 2
bdr. Priced to sell fast . Call
Johnson Mobile Hom e
Brokers. 446·3547.

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
K'E SS EL ' S
QUA L ITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES , 4 MI .
WEST , GALLIPOLI S, RT
35. PHONE 44&lt;1-3668.
1977 70xl..t, Govenor mobile
home . 3 bdr., 1' 112 baths,
owner has moved to
Flor ida pr iced to sell ~u i ck .
Johnson Mob ile H ome
Broker s, 446·3547 .
1976 New Moon 65 x14, gas,
2 bdr. , 2 window air con·
ditiorlers, skirting and
st eps, extra clean, S7 . ~5 .
Johnson Mobile Home
Brokers, «d ·3547 .

1969 KirkwOOd 12x65, 2bd r .,
stove, carpeting, air cond.,
very nice condition. Call
675-2427 .
3 bdr. mobile home completely furnished . Call 446·

9669.
Did vou know that you can
st ill own your own home for
less than $150. a month?
We' re not talking about a
mobile home but an Ohio
Building CO&lt;fe approved
house . See our All
Amerkon MO&lt;fel 11 AmPak
Plaza or RT. so Well of
A - or call 992-IOJ.&lt; or
698'8111 for InformaTion.
1904 Trov MObile Home.
Furnls~ed. gOOd cond ., new
carpet, l'h battto. washer.
$.1,000. Call after 5 p.m . 614667-3065.

·M obi le Home. 675·6323.
F OR sale or rent. 12x50
PMC house tra il er on nice
lot, ca tl after 5, 304·675-

5656 . '
33

Farms tor Sale

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

Farm House, 34 A . Farm,
'tob. base, 2 barn~ . 15 mi .
So. of town. Ca ll446·2426.
~ - __. ..._· ___,_______

3i__..... ~L,..o_,t._s,&amp;._,A,c,r.,e,a,.
g,..
e_
LOT S · Real nic e campsi te
on Ra't coon Creek , all
uti lities -av.ail able, $300.
down, owner wi ll fin ance,
ca ll after 3 p .1n ., 256·6413.
Wou ld you like to own a
hOme ol your own . We
didn ' t have $10,000 for a
down payment nor $5,000
nor even$1 ,000. Do wh at we
d id Cal l 513-592-9175.
29 Wooded Acs., part iall y
developed, Rt. 141 fron·
tag e, al l mineral ri ghts,
rur al water avail. $1 5,000.
379-2540.
Approx imately on e half
acr e lots, located be tween
Gallipo li s and Hol zer
MJ!:dical Center , excel lent
·re si de nt i al ar ea . c it y
water, · sewer and city
schools. Buy now and bui ld
in the fut\Jre. Enter from
Rt. 160 or Bulav iile Rd.
$5,000. up . Phone 446·41 53
after 5:00.
BY owner. 3 apart men t
house on approx. 1 acre.
Li ve in one, r ent others to
make your payment . Can
be converted si ~gl e home.
Ci t y water , will consider
land contr act . 675-1883 9-5
p.m .

41

wednesda , October 21, 1981

Pomeroy- Midcileport, Ohio

e-12- The Daily Sentinel

Houses for Renl

41

House;i'Or"Rei\t -

J bdr . house 2 baths, fOll y·
carpeted, $300 a month plus
no pets,
35
de posit ,
Ch illicothe Rd. Call U6 J7.48 or 256-1903 .
3 bed r oom ra nch with
base ment , r eference &amp;
deposit r equired . A v ai lable
Nov . 1st . Ca ll-446·0595 ;·
2 , bedroom Unt urn ls'hed
$190. 1 bedroom f urn ished
apartem nt . S1 25 . N avlors
Run. Secur it y deposi t. Call
614-'m-2288 .

2 bedroom house in Letart
Fa lls, Ohio. With di ning
roo m and f ir epl ace. Range
and refri gerator inc luded .
$135. plus deposit . 1·216·532·
3543.
' '
2 bedroom wi th basement
in Hender son. $165 m onth .
$100 , deposi t and referen·
ces. 675-11 t8 .

44

Apiirtmemt
for Rent

KI T

3 bdr .• dquble w ide , con·
venient loca ti on in City
limits, furni shed, new carpet &amp; drapery throughout /
all utilities paid except
electri c, no pets, no more
than 4, Ref. &amp; dep r eg. S350
per mo. 446-3547 .

2 bdr. unfurni shed mob .
ho m e, 2 m i .
from
Gall ipolis. Adults · Only,
$1 75 . Call 446·2300.
2 tra ilers for rent in
Ka nau ga. Ca ll675·34754.

A PA RTM E NTS, m oblle
hom e s,
hou se s,
Pt.
Pleasa nt and Gal lipolis.
6·14-&lt;44-8221 or 61 4-245-9413.4.

2 BEDROOM apartment,
HUO af cepted. 675-5104.

APARTMENT S
One
bedroom starts al $152 .00
per monlh . Two bedroom
starts at $1 88.00 per month .
Deposi tS200 . Call446·2745.
-~~~~~

A PARTMENT
Call446-0390.

for

2 bdr. upsta irs duplex,
st ove &amp; refri g. in cluded, 15
V ir1t St. Call 446-2419, 9 to
llor 4tol0 .
1 bedroom apts. available

at Riverside Apts. Equal
Oppor tun it y Housing . Call
992-7721.
2 bedroom apartment on
Spring Av e, Pomeroy . Par·
tiallv furni shed . $170 you
pay utilities. Cali 992-2288
after 6 p.m .
Ava ilabl e. 1 bedroom apt.
for r~:tn t . Contact Village
., M anor Apts., Mid dleport.
9927767.

Small 4located
rm. &amp;7J.)
bath,
rear fur3rd
nished,
A ve .• Gallipoli s. $110 per
mo., $60 deposi t. Ca ll 446·
3870 or.W· l340.

~.,

im!ffi "

-~ _,.,..,.. ""

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

Space tor Rent

54

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
99H479 .

Misc. Merchandlce

Firewood S-40 truck Joad or
$35 truck load you pick it
up. S60 cord delivered. Call
"'-"6· ,.745o~ ~· 1630 .

T ra iler loTs. Cal l 675· ]076.

For sale wood &amp; coal stove.
Caii2S6-1427.

4,9_ __,F'--o" r'--L
, e, a, s,_,e' - - RE STAURANT for lease,
Pt. Pleasant area . Write :
Box C-15 in care of Pt.
Pleasant Register.

Fiat Allis model 6E dozer
with cargo wench, Flat
Allis model 545 rubber tire
endloader 21 1 ~ yd. bucket,
completely overhauled
w ith · new eng ine, ~ both
items in exc. condition.
Blaine King 304-372-6390,
Ripley, WVA.
'Firewood for sale mixed
hard wQOd , $35 whole, $40
split stacked and delivered .
Call «6-9007. or 245-5506.
1 yr, old Homelife super 2
chain saw, $75. Call 446·
0159.
More than 100 pieces nf
brown underpinning for a
mob fie horhe, used just one year. A seven and one half
feet by 58 inch wide ·oval
rug, and white un iforms
size 9-10. Caii4-Ut·3D65 after
~ : 30 PM.

.

Handmade walnut gun
cabinet, will take $200. Call
367-7238 .
Snow plow for sale side
power ·angle. exc . cond .
Call 388-9848
A.C. D iagnosti c tune up
center, also air jack made
by Gray Mfg. Call Betz
Honda Sales 446-2240 before

Gravely tra ctor &amp; mower,
S750. Call after 5PM 3670482 .
Complete line of Grocery
Store E_cauipment for !ale.
Reasonable. Ph . 256·641] . .
1979 ATC HOnda 70. electric
guitar with amp $60 , intertainment center $30.
Call36J.7606 .
New 1981 model sewing
machine .
Zig - zags,
monograms, sews on button , makeS button holes,
darns, mends, fancy stitch.
Regualr price $2,.9. ~5 now
only $99.50. Call collect 1304-736-5289.

2 pc. living room suite,

a.

good cond. corbin Snyder
Furniture. Phone 446·1171 .

LIVING room su ite &amp;
lounge chair. Cal l after: 4,
304-675·1204.

.

SCAMP Travel Trailer . All
f iberglass, light weight, 950
lbs. Factory direct. Call
Toll free 1-800-346--4962 for
free color brochure. SAVE
BIG BUCl&lt;iS.• ·

1974 VOLKSWAGEN cam·
per. sink, refrigerator, pop·
tiP lop. Also Datsun topper.
call30H75-5704 .
CB,TV , Radio
Equipment

Firewood for sale mixed
hardwood , split, delivered ,
&amp; stacked . Call682-6943.

SPANISH stereo, tap e
deck -r eco r der ,·- AM ·FM .
r adio, $125. Flute, $160. 304·
Hotpoint auto . dryer. exc.
675·2720.
cond .• J99. Hoover portable
ex c. cOnd . Cal! 446·8181.
-~----54 Misc. Merchandice
Rat liff Pools &amp; Service. Firewood split &amp; delivered .
Complete sales, service, $35. truck load, or $65. a
pool covers, and win - cord. Call 614-843·2933 or
teri zation kits. Call446-1324 614-843-2&lt;52 .
Slabs for sale. $15 pick-up
truck load. North of ~acine
on Carmel Rd.

Fi rewood-split, del ivered
and stacked. Mixed WOOd
$65 -per· cord or $35 per half
cord. Hardwood $75 per
cord or $..0 per half cord.
Call for quotes on large
quanities, Phone 245·.S..78.

'

Redwing boot~. Safety toe
Reg. price $79 .95 . Our prlct:
$56 .95 . Bailey's, Mld qleport .
·

New wOOdburning ad·on
furnance , still in factory:
carton, heat$ large home.'
$.150. Call256·1216.

3 dog fri c ~ sawmill. Ex·
cellent coP d43·342l.

2 upstairs apts. in Rutland.
2 people, 1 chi ld only .. Ar·
nold Grate. 7_.2-2511 days,
742 ·2246 evenings.

Mixed firewood . Single
load $35.00, 4 loads $100,
and 10 load S200. Call 256·
1471.

.26' TROU f WOOD travel
trailer and camp site on
Raccon Creek . Close. to
Oh lo River . S500 down.
Owner will finance .• 6t4-2S6-

t"'1 .:==========-L..:====::::::::::~

Th ey 'II D() It EVery T"I me

1216.
---------~
New Crop Appln· Red arid
Golden Dellcloua, Wlnesap,
Rome BeauTy, Grimes
Golden and JoMathan·
Retail and WhOltU,je, any
quani!Y available. Also
fresh Apple Cider, Pumpkins, homomode Apple
Butter and more produce
delights. Bob's Market,
Mason, wv. Open 1 days.
- Phone 773-5121 .

s

rm . houSe in Gallipolis.
Call446·3945 after SPM .
Two or three bedroom,
riv er view. Phone «6-3329.

'

2 Story, 3 BR. fireplace,
Vinton, large lot, gar ., no
iside pets. Sec. dep. &amp; ref.
req. 388-8795.

Dlacontlnued cabhlets, top,
,.stove, . hood, sink. S1200.
Dale's K ltc~en Center. 6752311.

Royal Chef gas cook stove.
$75. 675-5490.

3 Bedroom, 2 bath , gas
heal, ciTy schools. 446-2957,

HAND powered lawn
mower $39 .00. Phone 3114675-2931'

2 BR home, country atmosphere, living room,
modern
kitchen
with
refrlg., all carpeted. · Sec.
dep. &amp; ref. Call STuTes Real
EstaTe, 4.16-4206.

FIVE joints ot metal vent
all fuel pipe with through
wall lnstollotlon, 30...95-

2 bdr. hOUse in Eureka, ex.
cond. 1 child exceptable, no
pets . Call4.16·8535.

54 Misc. Mtrchanctice
Mon Igomery War d w OOd
burner $200. Phone 6756130.

Mi chigan apples . Red·
Yellow
De I i c ious.
Johnathan. Stepman, Win·
dsap, Cortland, Delmar
Garnes, Letart, wv. 895·
3400.
Sears K enmor:-e gas 65,000
space heater. 675-6023.

1 ton GMC 1950 Chevy
pickup . F toni living room
su ite. Floor furnace . Phone
675-5162 .
NEW'baby super swing $25 .
Baby clothes, phone 304·
675·7230 .
USED Kirby sweeper with
attachments, 304-675-4157.
MAGIC Chef microwave
oven, tou ch control , wilh
digital c lock, 304-773-9160.
Pe'h for s~ le

S6

POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor aT 367-

7220.

3439.

1977 Corvette 20.000 m iles,
exc. cond . Call 446·6313 after 4PM .
1973
C amara,
350
automatic , excellant. S79S .
3112 m iles west of Rt.' 7,
Leading Creek Rd. 1423010.
__,

-_
_________

__ _

1966' 8 c ylinder white Dodge
Coronet. 4 door , 1 owner
S350. 94n335.
~---- -----

MORRISON ' S Auto sales.
Henderson( WV . Phone 6751574 675 2881.

or

1978 Mustang II, 4 cylinder,
4 speed , am -fm rad io tape
deck, ac , 38,SOQ miles,
$2500. 304-937 ·3244. '

DRAGONWVND
CAT TERY - KENNEL. AKC
blaCk Chow puppies, CFA
Himalayan, Persian and 79 OLDS CUtla ss, loaded,
Siamese kittens. Call 446-- 304-675-4087 . •
3844 ._tter _.p .m .

----·--- -·..,.----

HILLCREST KEoNNE,L
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities .
Also AKC Reg . Dober mans. Cali 446·7195.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming.
AKC
Gordon
se t ters,
Eng lish Cocker Spaniels .
Call446-4191.

39 CHEVY sedan with a
r ebuilt motor . Asking
s 1500. 304-576 2602.
- -- - - ---'· ~ --- -

1960 CorveMe, 56 Plymouth
Belvedere; call after S p .m .
304-882-3320.
1972 Maverick . $375. 8953997.

.,._--..... -- --·--- -- -- - --- --~ -· -

12
Beautiful AKC registered
Boston Terrior puppies .
Call446-7432.

())

CIJ

AKC Springer Spaniel puppies, 6 weeks old, liver and
white, black and white.
Call after 5 pm 1-304-429·
.481...
'

Fi sh Tank and Pet Shop
2413 Jackson Ave ., Pt.
Pleasant. 675-2063. Mon.,
Thur s., &amp; Fri. 11 to 6. Tu es.•
Wed ., &amp; Sat. 11 to 4. Check
our Fish Special.
Stud Service · AKC Old
English Sheepdog. 895 ·3624 .

i976

Diesel Pickup '78 Int. 22.000
actual miles . A ir . 446·2957 .

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

i

CAPTAIN EASY

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables
, __ _

Potatoes, apples, pum ·
pkins, &amp; cider. Rayburn ' s
Market, Kanauga , Oh. 4466247 .

--· . ......... .
......................

63

Livestock

Horse
for
sale ,
•1:2
Amer ican saddle bed ,
Morgan, 1 yr. old, gentle .
Call afTer 7 p .m . 256-1781.

•n

For sale Grain fed butchering steers. 'Lawrence
Burdell, 245-5181.
Cows, cows and calves.
herd bulls prospects.
yearling heifers . Some
sired by or A. I . to National
Champions! Second annual
sale will be at lhe Athens
County Fairgrounds, 2PM.
October 31. For catalogs
contact Arraw Farms, Rt, .
4.~Athens or Jeffers' Farm,
Rt. 1. Athens, Ohio 45701.
Jumbo Bobwhite Quail , 6
week Old to adult sizes. 61498H3~5 .

11

--

-Vans&amp;4W.D.
..
----~---

Ford van campe;r. Call 3889909.
'
1973 vw van . very gOOd
COnd . $1 ,600. 992 -6362 .

JEEP
for
sale. - 80
Cherokee, 12000 miles. 4
wheel drive, excellent condition , phone 304·675 ·2535.
1976 Ford Van, E350 . $1600.
675-7454 .

__________ _

-·- - -- · -

---~-~

74__,
- - MOtorCYCleS-- ';"·

All used bikes drastically

1975 Dodll!! Monaco air
cond., 4 dr., auto, OOOd
cond., $900. Call612-7373 alter 5:00.
Ford Muatang 1975, ~II. Ps,
IUtO. Call 245·5669 In
evenings.
19n Mustang !IOOd cond.,
~8, PS, AMIFM rtdlo,
alanclanl flaor anlft, • 11tw
llrttt . . C.IliJII , . .
mllelgo. $2,300. Call 56-

6265.

lit.

I? 'l'e.A.R; a:~

'bu ...ve'~
E:OT' 1.(]11; 01= 114111f6

APOI)lP

~ C).l.llT

•
1

IIIUPPET SHOW
(I) CAROL . BUIIN!TT AND
fiiii!NOI
YOUAIK!DFORIT
AIIOTHI!R UFI
eCIJ FAIIIli.YFEUD
LAVERNE AND IHIRL!Y
AND CDIIPANY
(I)
NIOHTLY BUIINEU
REPORT
Cia&gt;
RICHARD SliiiiiONI
SHOW
[jj) OUILTlNO
il2l e
ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
(I) SANFORD AND ION
C1J CBN UPDATI NEWS
CIJeffiREALPEOPL!Avlo"

4,8x15' white steel spoke
rims, 6 lug , for Jeep or
Chevrolet truck, exc . cdndltlon. Sl25.00. ~- 9"65 .

-~~___. ~~

ei1J®liiiR. IIIERLlN Max
Martin ahowa Zachow to uae a
magical duet that changea one
thing Into another and Zac uae•
thia magic at a party honoring a
beautiful model.

(I) THE HUIITER AND THE

''

(a
·

--

HUNT!D Narrated by Joae
Ferrar. t"la docuemtuy
tocuaea on the continuing
aearch for Nazi war criminals,
and contains Interviews with
Simon Wieaenthaland Beata
Klaratald. (80 mina .)
[jj) RAIIILlN'
:D6 (I) ALLlNTHEFAIIIlLY

-

- - - - ·- - - - -

nWKRPcUmbalo 10th place in
the rating a, bringing both Joy
end compllcajlona when the
at aft Ia approached to or"anize
a union.
8:35 (I) PRE·SEASON BASKET·
BALLAtlantaHawklf\IIKanaaa
Cit~ Kinga
,

8:58 C1J CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 &lt;Ileffi NIIC IIIOYlE OF THE
WIIK 'Friendahlpl, Secr eta

LOCKSMITH
Servic e.
Residential , automotive.
Emergency service. Cawl
682·2079.

a11d Lie•' 1979 Stars; Cathryn

Damon, Tina Louise , Stene
Stnena. Sh~; women become
murderauapect a wh•n a baby' a
skeleton Ia 'discovered In the
sorority house they ll\led In 20
't!._ara earlier. (Repeat; 2 hra.)

&lt;

RON ' S Television Serv ice:
Speciali zing In Zenith and ·
Motorola, Quazar, and ·
house calls . Phone 576-2398
or .u6·2454.

UV 700CLUI
e11J 1!11 BPEClAL IIOYlE
PRESENTATION 'A F ow Oaye

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

In Weaaal Creek' 1981 Stars:
Mare Winningham, John
Hammond, Ke\lln Geer. When a
feiaty young woman tlltchea a
ride with a runaway farm youth,
it plunges them Into adventuraa,
fuMy and sad, that draatioally 1
changarha luturea thay ' n
planned tor themaelvea. (2
hra.)
(l)WORLD'FoodAid :What 'aln
It tor U.S.? ' WORLO, e~~;aminea
the U.S. policy of sending lood
a id abroad and ln\leatigaaa
criti cs' chargee thatthebilllone
ofdollaralnald iain aomecaaea
d&amp;lril'f\Bntal. (80 mini.)
[jj) THE HUNTER AND THE
HUNTED Narr ated by Joae
Farrar , this docuemtary
toc~se a on the continuing
starch lor Nazi war criminals ,
and contains inlarvlewa with
Slmon Wieaanthal and Be ate

'
RlNGLES'S SERVICE exper:ienced mason , roofer ,
carpenter.
electrician,
general repairs and
remodeling. Phone 30.4-675·
2088 or 675-4560.
~· - ----- ·--- ~ -~

Of course
not, Ph4ll is!

,..

Are high interest rates . ,
keeping you from a new ·
hOtne? Then put a new look
on your present one. We do
all types of custom building
and
r emodeling .
For
quality. professional • ser·
vi ces call : Terry Gray 895·
3386 or John Wamsley 7735527.

Klarafeld . (60 mii•a.)

"lrubakM'!• 1080

()) JOHN CALLAWAY INTER·
VI~WS 'John Cheever' Iaika
a bo~tthe effect a of hispaJenta'

separation when he waa 13, his
early struggles aa a writer, and
thaexpet'iencaawhichladhiato
write hla moat heralded novel.
·Falconer'. (80 mlna.)
[jj) NEWS

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and PinePhone 446-3888 or 446-.un

')01.1'~

WH·WHEN
I SEE

yOU?'

lOJA6AIN?'

cl ean furnace saves
money . Have your furnace
cleaned . Call67~-21SB.
Excavating

'

60NNA BE

ALL Ri6HT, AReN'T

WILL.

A

83

'

10:28 Cll CBN UP.D~l;l! NEWS
10:30 ()) SINO OUT ~III!RICA
(jj) ALF,RED HITCHCOCK
PRESENTS
10:58 Cll CIN UPDATI! NEWS
11:00 [})GeCIJCID&gt; NEWS
.
[}) NAIHVILU! RFD
(I) DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE
11:05 (I) TISEVENlNQN!WS
11:15 Cll®. NEWS
11:28 [}) CBN UPOAT! NEWS .
t 1:30 [})eiiJTHETONtQHTSHOW
'The Baal 01 Carson' Gueata;
Pat Boone . George Carlin ,
Branda Boozer. (Repeat; 80
mini.)

C1J ANOTHER LIFE
. II(I)CBSLATEMOYtEWKRP
\'

WATCH
IT,

,:;.- ::-=::: E:Iecfrica-1-=-~
&amp; Refrigeration

CHUBBY

SEWING Machine repairs,
service . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Sc issors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992·2284.
·
JACKS REFRIGERATlO, ' ·'''
N. air cortdltlon serviCe;
commercial , · Industrial.
Phone 8112-2079.

11

t

Anchored by Ted Koppel.

---

.Coal Hauling, 3 to 5'h tons.
388-9329.

11:00 ()) IICHALI!'IIIAYY
11!041 CIJIIOYIE · (DR AliA) ''1'1

j

TIAM, GOI Americana have an
enduring lo\le altair with the
aportlno world; th~a apaclal
lookaat the auparatara, aupar
tum• and their dedicated
fanl .
.
(I) AIC N!WI NlOHTLlNE

r

~t&gt;yTOd

Koppel.
lllle LOVIIIOAT·Achlrmlng

TRl STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Galllpolia
44&lt;1-7133 or 44&lt;1· 1133.
'

.

Ouallty Autobocly a. Paint
'
worlr: . lnturance work
welcome . Sunroata In - MOWREYS Upllolatery Rt'
stalled from 1200-1230. Auto 111ox 124, Pl. Pleasant
. Trim Center, 446-1,..,
' 675-4154, '
' '
~

tJZ
.A 10
WEST .

•u

EAST

•As

.QBB32
.K7
tQ94
• 10171
.QJ7
.11512
SOUTH

•v

.KQ~86

tAKU
+K94

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: Nortb

WHI

Eut

Pass

Pw
Pua
PUI

Pau

Pua
Pua

Opening lead:

•2

-I".
4NT

West must come down to
two club!. They turn out to
be lhe queen and jaclr. 10
your nine of club! beComes
your 12th trick.

~

loy JHOMAS JOSEPH .

ACROilS · :rr Malh curve
1 Gallbnaufry 38 Qulet period
5 Baby (It.) 39 Spirit lamp
10 FreDFh
.cl stop
river
African lake
II Occident's . DOWN
opposite
' I Not fluid
13 Take on
%Barter: swap
cargo
3 Frantic state
Yeotenllly'l Alllwer
14 Entertain
4 Teeny
U Taunter
2'1 Go-go or

·n

15 Rile words

5 Salt of

II lndi8tinct

11 Chinese
dynasty
Grazing
groWld

boric acid
I Dunne
7 Ivan's jet
8 Have

19 Theater box 29 Equanimlly
%Z Level
30 Heavenly
23 Lumber·
gift

18 Flatten
ZO- Vegas
%1 Seep

terminated
9 Away
· from camp

Z4 Poised
25 Golfer

i?

taxi

jack's cry

31 Mountain
nymph
31 Inf811t ·

Irwin

37 HJust a - !"

ztNomadlze
%3 Flavorful

25Actress
June ~

26 Response

to an
explanation

27 Confused
state
26 Editor's

concerns
(abbr. )

29 Frank
Capra's
birthplace

32 Seed coat
33 "- Touch

of Venus"
34 Fightiilg

35 X-rated

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
I&amp;

L

0

N GF E L L 0

to wor k

It :

w- .__

One 'l etter simply tlandl for another. ln this sample A ia
U!ed for the three L's, X for the two o· ~ , Nc. Single letters,
apoalrophea, the length and formation of the word• are all
hiats. Each day the code letters are .di!erent .

blahalor o-nulnety talla in krla
whh thNe woman at the aame
Ume; IICI two oon men ttage a
phonyacoklentandplantOtua.
O!ollt&amp;t: 70 mlno.)

CRYPTOQUOTES
CNL

CADY

PAC

CASL

PDG

AH

RPCLG

CNL

ZLPDGL.-~LAYGAMN

GLPWLM·
RMC

QDY

y D(::

EWLAHC
,

I

11:10 ()). TOIIORIIOW COAST·
TO·CDABT Qol&amp;to: Tlnyo

XU:

Tuaker~

----------

Raa Ftaed~ Marvin

Khnaan. Robart Altman.

y

..

i

'

NORTH
1G-ll41
1014
• AJ 1054

ulallllaeraNI" 1•1
· 12:11 I]) REIIi!MIIR WII!N: GO,

1~7==::;;;;::;=
Upholstery

'

.J

This Jannersten hand Is a
trifle different from most of
tbooe In his book. You reach
six spades on very normal
bidding and without an ,.
adverse trump lead you can ·
try to ruff two diamonds and
. a club In dummy and just
lose the ace of trumps.
Unfortunately lor. this line
of play the opponents start
with two rouilcls of trumps
and you have oaly two
trumps left in dummy. Wbat
· can you do about your third
loeer?
· Maybe you can set up
· dummy's foflh heart. So yoo
take dummy's ace of hearts
and ruff a heart. Now you
play the ace-Ung of
alamonds, ruff a diamond
and lead a tbird heart. East
shows out and yoti ·can't set
up a fifth heart.
You also see that you can't
develop a squeeze against
East. What can you do
agalnat West?
If be holds botb the queen
and jack of club! you llave
him. You simply lead and
ruff your fourth diamond. II
West· chucks a heart you can
~t up a heart in dummy so

9kwJ' a..,." 1taa

11:45 Cllt_!NNYHIU8HOW
il2la ABC NIWI NlOHTLINE

-- - - ~--1-

Ge_nmi'H.uun,

In Cincinnati : 'Turkaya Away '
Arthur Cartaon comaa up wtth a
Thankagl\llng Day promotion aI
ltunt and .all he revaalala that it
ln~olveee helicopter and live
turkava . (Rapaat) 'Blue
Sunlhine' 19778tara:Zalman
Kin~ ; Oaborab Wln1era. A. man,
·charged with a triple murder,
leamalhathlaoloaafrlendlathe
culprit, driven to murder by a
halluciM.Iory drug.
(I) MC CAPT10NED NEWS
CIDJIIOYIE -(W!IT!RN) •• ~

BARNEY

BACKHOE and Septic tank
Servi ce. Larry Siden·
strick er . 675 -5580.

•s_

·

10:00 C!JIIOYlE · (ORAliA) ••

- ......--- - - - ----·-·-

82

2602.

FALL SPECIAL Have a
mochlnt poll&amp;htd &amp; wax
lOb. ISO, WIX only S20. Auto
Trlm C•nter, 44&lt;1-1,...

Jannersten continues

GAME 2 ABC Sparta will
pr ovide coverage ot Game 2
lrom the city ol ttte American
League Champion ; teama to be
announced .

H &amp; M CLEANING , S~R - ·'
VICE Steam &amp; -or pressure ,
wash trucks. trailerS,. ,
mobile homes. farm eQuip· .
ment, etc. Phone 388·9376
or 446-3829 .

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367-7m or
367-0591.
.

Auto Rel"'lr

BRIDGE

8:30 e(I)CIIl-RPtNClNCINNA·

Car lift for garage S400 . 202
angle Pl"'l turbo heads for
small block 11000. 1973 Olds
for INirt&amp; 1110. Phone 576-

77

pas..,..

JurntMe Booll No. 17; cont•lnlft9 t10 puutat, Ia •v•llablalor 11.11
from Jumbfe, Clo lhll Mwtl)lper, Box 34, Nofwood, N.J. 07MII.Irdudayour
n1me, 1ddrn zl codt Jnd m1k1 cMch
1tHt to N

SPECIAL
C!J IIOVlE •IIIIUSlC) " ~
"Timat.Jqu.e" 1080
(I) 1m. WORLD SERIES ,

Call 446·2801 for termite,
roach, bird, rod ent , spider,
and tl f as control. Free
est imates, Bill Tllomas.

I&gt;Y""'--·
I'll XI I X T'

YeSierday·e J Jumbles: DEITY ROUSE POROUS DEADLY
·
Answer: They open to let p&amp;opia go upSTEPLADDERs

UVNAnoNALQEOORA~

OH~UH·HUH -

arrange the cirded.lettere to
form the surprise anaww. u q ·
gos!Od

. (An-.-.ow)

to .California •8 myaterlout Mt.

----·~-~

1981 Honda XR' 500 Dirt
Bike, like new . Priced to
selL 1977 Honda 750 K gOO&lt;I
cond, 446-0648 after 5.

Print ltllswer here: " (

wood'a moat fa moue glamour
en.otographera. (80 mint.}

1 SEE . T1iAHII.
YOIJ, MOSY-

I' Now

_.A
L--L-1"-"----'"'-&lt;L......J

a aegemenl on one of Holly·

IJW!

WHAi A NEAl
MAID M15Hi' 15E.

IBEMMERt
"'l
I n

Shuta, a look at a group or
gradeaohoolchiidranwhohave
their ownTV newt program, and

"' 1..001&lt;.

750 and
1000 gallon
PLASTIC sept i c tanks .
State and County approved. Total weight 300
lbs . Haul in your pickup
1978 Honda motorcycle, truck. Ron Evans Backhoe
350, low mileage, like new. , Service, located 3. miles
Call 304-372-6390. Ripl ey, South of Jackson on St. Rt .
93 ' 266-5930.
WVA .

...

1976 Flat, 4 dr .. 5 spd., AMFM radio, good cond.,
51.6011. Call 367-0«15 after
5PM.

'bu"4e 6I'&amp;IJ ~.~e ~

1UT, A.«

---- -----~~

reduced for Immediate
cl earance . Betz Honda
Sal es,
Upper
R:t . 7,
Galllpolls. 4.16-22ol0.

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

Auto for Sale

':ial~ ~ ~ l.l,lNIP

French City
Pa inting
ReSidential, commercial.,
interior, exterior, paperhanging , and te.xured
ceilings . Ph. 362· 7784 or 367-'
7160 .

Stark's TreP. Trimming. lei sured . 304-576-2010.

76 - ·- -Aulo Pirii __ _
Hots'fein
Milk
CoW .
&amp; Accessories
Produces 4 11:1 gallons a ,
day.. Gentle . $.100. Call B82CHARLIE;'S SALVAGE
2ol03.
Auto parts, auto repair.
wrecker service , buy
automobiles,
radia.tor:s and
· ~········"·"
batteries. 4445·7717 .

....... . ·-·

BORN LOSER

Wll'.jDON
GLASS SERVICE Home
maintainance
and
r'emodel ing . Phone 388-,
9326.

1977 FORD Super Cab, V-6,
automatic, $1995. 304·675·
5950.

1980 Chevy :v. ton, four
wheel drive, four speed, ps,
CB , many · extras . Call
anytlme.713·51SO.

gstaeiE

7:36
7:68
8:00

- -FERRE LL ' s

flaT bed , 2 speed a x le $1995.
Call446-3691 or 4.16-7365.

13

.58 ,

7:30

l

IDRAPEAt
r) I J

RI!PORT
11111 II!WB

BING' S CONCRETE CON STRUCTION · Specializing
in concrete dr iveways .
s i dewalk s.
patio ,
base m ent. garage floors
and etc. Free estimat~s . 11
years ex perience. Call 367 7891.

Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes .
Pumps Sales and Serv ice.
304-695·3602.

69 international 2 ton , 20

!~ATAt-NT

•,TONIGHT
HAPPfOAY8AQAtN
I]) nc: TAC DOUGH
()JI IIIACNI!lL-U!HRI!R

STUCCO PLASTERING
te:xtured c-e ilings, com merci al and residential , ,
free estimates. Cali 2561162.

-~--------

PIIOGIWI

\!!IANNOUNC!D

Trucks for Sale

t hevy•2 1/2 Ton dump
truck, heavy duty 16 ft.
bed, twin hoist, well equipped, low.mileage, ex . cond.
Call 304-372-6390, Ripley ,
WVA .

i

I CHARN I
.I KIJ I

PIIIIA~

7:00 ()) .

·ST ANLEY ST EEMER
Ca rpet Cleaning
·
446-4208

CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpet
Cleaning featured by
Galllpolls,
Oh
io.
Terms
of
ter, lnc. 133 Plne ST. ,
sale Is cash on hand at time Haffelt ll rothers Custom
of sale. Written bids may carpets. Free estimates .
lle submitted To GMAC at Call446-2107.
318 Main street, Belpre,
Ohio. GMAC- reserves the
right to withdraw this WEATHERALL -CON CRETE - quality and servehicle from th e sale . 1979
vi ce, call675-1582.
GM .C .
Ser i al
no .
TC7DE9VS79549, Account
no .
23 2- 1935- 90871 . PAINTING - interior and
GENERAL MOTORS AC- e x terior, piumbjng ,
c E pTA N c E
c 0 R - roof ing, some remodeling .
20 yrS. exp. Call 386-9652.
PORATlON .

1978 Ford Fairmont, good
condition . g ood
g as
mileage, 4 cy_linder , 4
speed, cute . 882-3145.

5.

2 bedr.oom furni shed apt.
99n434, 992-5914 or 304-6622566 .

7 rm . and bath, 6 acres wiTh
barn . Caii2S6-9344.

EYE-

Home
lmprqvemei\Js

7:06

PUBLIC SALE
The. following .descrl~
vehicle will be offered for
Publlc Sale at 10:30 AM on
NoVember 3, 1981 at
Smith's GMC Truck Cen-

•

I

WIDN!IDAY

JlM MARCUM ROC&gt;I ing
77 ~ord Must~~ g 11 ' 28 •.400 , spout ing and sldmo .-,. 30
rhlles, new fires, new pamt, years exper ience . Free
AM·F M stero casseMe, exc. estimat es. Remodeli ng .
Call 368-9857.
cond . Ca'll-446-3599 .

4 bdr. 2 112 bath b i level

wiTh pool Off Rt. 35. Ca ll
Wis eman Real Estate
Agency. 446-3643.

,~

OCT. l1 , 1181

1978 Plymo~th Vol are.
gooct cond. c all379-2726.

Furn i shed Rooms

"

Television.
•
•
VIeWing

•.

1970 Frolic travel trailer . 22
ft ., sel f contained. $2.000 .
99B983.

1975 Silver Camaro runs

4 roo rrl unfurn i'she&lt;:l cotta ge. Phone 675· 1453.

52

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag-13

OICK TRACY

Shasta trave l traiiOf", $700.
sto ve, ref, &amp; si nk l_n cluded.
call388·9025.

good_ Call 24H212.

2 bedroom twin singlf in
Pt. Pleasant at 105 Popl ft r
Stree t. S200 month pius
depos l!. 1-614-263-8322 or
614·263-2669.

Rent.

Complnt
equipment

1969 Charger fixed up as
' The Gener al L ee' Du kes of
Hazz ar d .. 446·7HMr or .u60390.

Furnished effiency apt.
Down tOW"n Pt. Pleasant ,
All ulilities pa id, dep. req ,
Ca ll 304-695-3450.

46

Auto for Sale
78 cl1ev eHe, eKtr a sharp.

4630.

3 room furnished cottage,
utilities furnished , adults.
675-2812 or 675-15c80.

45

n

i971 BUick Electra verY
low m iles full po"Wer , good
condition, $1 ,000. Ca ll 4-46-

Merebaneuse
12 X60 mob ile 1'\ome. 2
bedroom, bath and half.
Approx im a tely 5 miles
Household GoOds
from Pomeroy and M id- 51
dleport on Rf . 143. Cal l 614·
LAYNE' S FURNITURE
m -5656 .
Sofa, chair, rocker, ottoman. 3 t ables, S500. Sofa ,
2 bedroom on Sandhill Chair and loveseat, $275 .
Road. 675·3834.
Sofas and ~ c hair s 'priced
from
$285 . to $795 , Tables,
------- ~2 bedroom furni shed, Sl SO s'38 and up to $109 . H ide-a·
p.er month plus uti Iti es. beds,S340., queen size, S380.
Recliners, S175. to S295 .,
Cal l 576-9073 or 576-2441 . ·
Lamps from $18 . to S65. 5
pc . difettes from $79., to
2 BEDROOM mobil e home, $385. 7 pc ., $189. and up .
furnished, 304-675-6512 .
Wood table with A chairs,
$219 up to $495. Des k $110 .
2 BEDROOM
homes, Hutches·, $300. and $375 .,
Mason and New Haven, maple or pine _f inish .
adults on l y , . no pets, 304- Bedroom suites - Bassett
675-1452, or 304-675 -2996.
Oak, $615. , Bassett Cherry ,
$795. Bunk bed complete
Unfurnished 2 bedroom with mattresses , $250. 'and
tra iler, married couples, 1 up to $350 .. Capta in' s beds,
$275. complete. Baby beds,
chi ld accepted. 675· 1076.
$99~ Mattresses or box
springs, full or tWin, S58 .,
3 bedroom mobil e home, firm , spa. and $78. Queen
fu rn ished or unfurni shed, sets, $1115. 5 dr. chests, $49 .
a ll electri c , wa sher and 4 dr. chests, U2. Bed
dryer, ac, I chi ld accep ted. frames, S20.and $25 ., 10 gun
Deposit and r efer ences. · Gun cabinet s, S350 ., dinet675-2133.
- te chairs $20. a.nd $25. Gas
or electri c ranges, $295. Or ·
2 bedroom mobile home in thopedicfsuper firm, S95,
Hender son, adults only, no baby ma r esses, $25 &amp; S35 ,
bed fram es S20, $25, &amp; $30.
pets . 675-3333 .
U s ed ,
Ranges ,
r efrig erators, and TV's,
44
Apartmemt
3 miles out Bulaville Rd.
for Rent
Open 9am to 7pm , Mon .
Furn ished apts. 2 bdr .. thru Fri.; 9am to Spm, S11t .
" 446-0322
S230., util iti es paid, near
HMC. adults. Call 44&lt;1-4416
after 7PM .
GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
wash ers,
refr i gerators ,
2 bdr . apartmen t unfur n., dryers,
Skaggs
Ap ·
in Cr own Ci ty, Oh io. Call range s .
pl i ances, 1918 Eastern
256 6520.
Ave., 446· 7398.
M obil e home in city cent r al
a ir and heat, adults only ,
dep. 446·0336.

Wr ight

Call~- 7~ .

ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Pa r k Cfmtr,a i Hotel.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

by Larry

Apartments. 675·.5548 .

S~E EPING

42

' N' CARLYLE '"

71
_

Wednesday, October 21, 1t8l

\'
"

•'

,,
'

�P•g-14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio
.
.._.

Wednelday, October 21, 1911

SEORC's ·15th annual
awards dinner Nov. 12

e

.

Twelve Soulheutern Oblo

com-

ty, Jackson, Wellstoo and Vlntoo
County.
In the past, honorees have lncluiled educators, pbylllclans, lndustrl8iists, merchants and media
representatives.

munities wW honor their "Man o1
• the Year" when the Solilheutern
Ohio Reglooal Cooncll IIIIJIIU lit the
Ohio Unlveslly Inn Iii AlheDo on Nov.
12, Bob EV8118, president, aald
today.

According to Evans, this Will be
the COW!cU's 15th aMual event.
Communities aJid areas represented are:
.
ty, Portsmouth, Ironton, PUre Coun-

Tlcketa may be purchued fr&lt;111
Rhod Mllll, Lopn Chamber of Commerce; Nelsonvllle Board of Trade·
Athens Area ~ber of ~
merce; Bill Childs, Berna1c1 Fultx,
Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce·
Rot~er Barron, Portamouth ~
Ouunber of Cptmteo:a!; Ironton
Chamber of Commerce; Howard
Thompson, Jackson Chamber of
CoiiUiltii.'e; Ton SolluB The Millo
Banking Company, and T~te Cline.

.Village mayors terminate cases

,

MEMBERSHIP - These Meigs Couuty Farm
Burelll1 members were presented memberoblp pills at
!be allllll8l meellllg of the OJ18nfzalion beld Tuesday
Dlgbt atlbe Chester Elementary Sdtool. They are lol'
· nl, I to r, Harvey VanVranken, Mr. and Mrs. Ray
· Midkiff, Mr. and Mn. Joseph Qulvey, first year.mem-

Trick or treat
ilight set Oct. 29

I

• Trick or !real night in Tuppers
~Pialns Will be held Thursday, Oct. 29
-from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. for children 12
and onder. The event is being spon. sored by the Orange Township
Volunteer Fire Department.
The siren will sound to begin and
end the actviti!lB. Firemen will be
stationed throughout the village to
assist children crossing the highway. People who wish to participate
are asked to turn on their proch
lights during the designated hour.

Veterans Memorial
Admissioll.!f-None
Discharges-Kathy Hawerton,
Estil Collins, John McDanieL

Campaign set
1be anriual door to door campaign
sponsored by Drew Webster Post 29,
American Legion, will be held Thur!lday, Oct. 12.
All legionaires who are able to

take part are to meet at the legion
hall at 6 p.m.

Meets tonight

Three defendants were fined and ·
two 6thers forfeited bonds in the ·
couri of Middleport Mayor Fred HoffmanTuesday night.
Fined were Gene John.son, Mid-

ben; hack, I lo r, David Koblent&amp;, Z5 years membership; Rex Shenefield~ 30 years; BID Carr, 35 years;
Arvll Holter, tO yean; Bob MUier, t5 yean, represenllllg BaDk One ol Pomeroy; Mrs. Mae Mora and SOD,
Donald Mora, 45 yean. A s~ ~was served by
the Eastern Balik lloolten nad entertabunent was by
lbe Tunellmen ol Columbus.

Area deaths

Conferences set
The first evening parent-leacher
conferences in the Meigs Local
School District will be held from 6 to
9:30 p.m. Thursday at the various

'.J·
.

FriendS may call at Ewing
Funeral Home after '7 p.m. this
The Rev. Willard F. Carney, evening until noon on Friday. The
Charleston, died ol an apparent family requests in lieu or flowers
heart attack while preaching at a that donations be made to the Meigs
County Heart Association.
revival in Athens on Oct.!5.
The Rev. Carney was the father of
Mrs. Dan (Faith) Hayman of

Rev. W.F. Carney

Syracuse,

who

survives.

James Calvin Smith
'

· JliJlleS Calvin Smith, 74, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, died Tu!lBday morning at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Cline was a son of the late
Charles Carletoo and Alice White
Smith. He was also preceded in
death by two brothers and one sister.
Mr. Smith was a veteran of World
War II and a member of Rutland
American Legion.
He is survived by his wife, Sara
Ruth Christy Smith; one son, Roger
Calvin Smith, Pomeroy; one
daughter, 'Meda Eloise Morris,

Members of Pomeroy Emergency
Po_m eroyi four grandchildren,
Squad, station one, are to meet this · Sharon Darst, James Morris, James
evening at 7 p.m. to go in a body to
Carl Smith and Roger Calvin Smith;
Ewing Funeral Home to pay their
three great gralidchUdren, Lisa Darrespects to Roy Mayer who died
st, Jason and Jeremy Morris; two
DIES - Roy Mayer, a
Monday night.
sisters, Mada Mitch, Massillon, and Pomeroy bDker lor over 30 yean,·
Freda Krautter, Pomeroy and one
dl"!! Mooday evenlllg at bls
brother, Melvin Smith, Pomeroy.
Pomeroy bome. Funeral services
Funeral services will be beld will be beld at Zp.m. Tbiusday at
(Continued from page I)
highway projects and reported on Friday at I p.m. at the Carleton Trlnlty Cbarcb In Pomeroy.
Church with tbe Rev. Keith Adkins _Friends may caD at the Ewing
the progress of repair presently
officiating. Burial wiD be in Carleton Funeral Home untll nocin TbUI'
. being done on Oak Grove Road in
Cemetery.
sday.
Sutton Township.

Discuss •• · ~

The second evening of the conschools. will be held during the
ferences

same
hoursare
on invited
Tuesday,
Oct. rl.
Parents
to visit
schools
attended by their cbildren during the
. conferences.

dleport and Max Geary, Middleport,
$100 and costs each, Ulteling; David
Manley' Middleport, $100 and ~
disorderly conduct; David Walkins,
Middleport, $150 and costa, theft of
gas cans, $150 and costs, petty theft.
Forfeiting bonds were liowle
Ferguson, Rt. I, Middleport, :110,
petty theft; Robert L. Cunningham,
Syracuse, $25, failure to yield.
Meanwhile, two defendants were
fined and live others forfeited bonds
in · the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarenc~ Andrews Tuesday 11/ght.

Fined were Keith ·Musser,
Pomeroy, $300 and COllis, resl.ting
arrest, $100 aJid costs, public intoxication; William Wise, Middleport, $100 and costs, public tnloldcation.
Forfeiting bon~ were Craig E.
Venory, Rt. 7, Pomeroy, and Lee C.
Smith, Portland, $31 each, speed;
Mark A. Casto, Pomeroy, $32 speed;
Gregory Sheets, HemlOCk Grove, 34,
speed; .Michael T. Smith, Pomeroy,
$50 loitering; Donald E. Hood,
Pomeroy, $53, no operator's license.

r;~~~~~~~~~;~:;;:;;~;;i;;;~~~;:~:;

1

CAKE
DECORATING ·
·SUPPLIES

Monday session
The Meigs County Regional Planning Commission Will hold ita quarterly meeting at3: 10 p.m. Monday in
the conference room of the Fanners
Bank Building. Current projects to
be discussed will Include the tax
map update, the access road and
congregat housing.

50716 Osborn Rd.

Reedsville, Oh.

667-6488

FOR HAUOWEEN
Wilton New

WITCH PAN
,ONLY . '5,96

Sock hop Friday
Tbe Meigs Vocal Music Boosters
Will sponsor a 50's sock hop at the

Meigs Ironton game Iron 10 p.m. to
high school on Oct. 23, following the
!2:30a.m.
Greg Vance ol WMPO will provide
the music. Admission Is $2..

~i~~i~~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Emergency runs
Four' emerg811cy runs were made
by the Middleport Squad Tuesday
the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service reported. ·
At 10:58 a.m. Martha Searles,
Middleport, was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; at 4:56 p.m.
Clara Smith, Middleport, to Holzer
Medical Center; at 6:08p.m. Sherry
Wilson, Middleport, to Holzer
Medil'81 Center and at 11 :07 p.m.
Brenda Ross, Middleport, to .
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Eckrich

HAM

Save on aLane Love Chest
of)Uur choice.
· ·

LOAf'••••••••••••••• ~.b~. $2.79

BOLOGNA ••••••••••• ~~~-~1.79

SALAD ••••••••••••••••••-.~~}1.39

Hb. Kraft Parkay

79
4
MARGARINE..~~:..

'3 Lb. Yellow

Ohio Colby
Longhorn

.3ONIONS
......... ~.~~- 89'
Lb. Golden or
·

10 Lb. ldoho Boklng

POTATOES .....~~?-~1.99

Quarters

$ ·

atEESE ... !-:~: ... 1.99

Red DeliCious

APPLES•••.......•~~~.

Sale
Priced

Compare at '23gts

290Z.

~

OSAGE PEACHES•••• ••• 2cans
Each Fall Lane offers a limited
selecllon of chests priced to make

.

~~~ $1.19

10 oz.

Cl/tS. The savings are big ·and we pass
them along to vou. But shop now, we
cannot re-order and this offer will not
be made again.

VIENNA PORK

6'11oz.

BARBEQUE~~~.$1.27

STARKIST TUNA•••••••••••••
4 Rolls

A. ~882 medium oak f.inish. 44 ~~: 18 · H 19

B. 114$83 pecan

finish. 44 x 1 6 -H 19

C. t48M honey pine finish . 44 x 16 -H19

CHARMAN\ TOILET

ALL
· IN
-

.

13oz.
LANE CHESTS
. -

I

NEW YORK - Americans recruited and paid by a ll!llitive former

CIA operative are ~Y Oyfng and maintaining IJbyan air force
planes, 1be New York Times sald today.
1be Amerieans, and also Canadian-ami-British pllots, have flown
· U.S.-made transports aJid helicopters, the Times said, attributliii the"
infonnation to BS!IOCiates I)( the fonner Cehtral Intelligence Agency

man, Edwin P. Wilson.
ll quoted one W~tem pilot as sayiJ!g·Americans plloted helicopters
in Libya's invasiOn of Cha&lt;llhis year.

Bad economy forces closings ·
CLEVELAND- Economic conditions were behind North American
Coal Co.'s decision lo close three of lts mines pennanently, company
officials said.
John R. Cook, North American's vice president in char~e of finance
and administration, said how the closings will affect the company's
earnings had not been precisely calculated.
The mines to be closed are the Powhatan No. 1 mine at Powhatan
Point, Obio; the Josephine No. 2 mine at Josephine, Pa.; and the
Conemaugh No. I mine at Seward, Pa., he said.

Five employees r~turn to work
GALUPOLIS, Ohio - Five employees of the Gallia County sheriff's
department have returned to work, but 19 others whi11rere laid off last
month are continuing to picket for union recognition.
1be five who returned to work at the order of Sheriff James Montgomery give him a total of eight employees.
Montgomery said he told the five to return to work or face dismissal.
He now has one dispatcher and one uniformed deputy working each
shift.
· The layoffs were necessary because of a shOrtage of funds , Montgomery said. He said he will have no more than 20 employees in 1982
unless lwids for his office are increased.

Proposal requires classification
WASffiNGTON - A Reagan·administration proposal would require
government officials to classify information even if they are not sure
that secrecy is needed to protect national security.
The new approach, contained in a draft presidential order obtained
. by The Associated Press, would reverse longstanding government
policy that mandates a firm detennination of national security danger
before a secrecy stamp can he applied.
·
·
That stricter policy was endorsed· by former Presidents Nixon in
1972.and Carter in 1978.

CLEVELAND - A rookie Clevelalid police officer on the force only
four months was fatally wounded Wednesday while trying to hall a
. bank-holdup on the city's east side.
Patrolman Anthony Johnson, 22, appointed to the force June 1, was ·
shot in the right side-of the head. Doctors said Wednesday he was surviving on life support systems with multiple fractures and
hemorrhage of the right side of the brain.
He died Wednesdily night at 7:55 p.m., according to police
spokesman Fred Szabo.

Court rules against state board
CINCINNATI - A federal appeals court ruled that the Ohio school
board totaUy failed to comply with state and federal iaws ordering an
end to racial segregation in Columbus and Cleveland schools.
The ruling Wednesday by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
upheld two court rulings that in effect require the state hn.srd to share
with local boards the cost of integrating both school systems.
.
"II nobody c~plained, we did nothing" about desegregating
schools, said Obio Board of Education member John Meckstroth -ol
Cincinnati. He said a system to monitor school districts now eiists.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 086 .
The lottery reported earnings of $652,697.50 on the drawing. The earnings came on sales of $8&amp;1,085, wbile holders of winning tickets are
entitled to share $211,387.50,lottery officials said.

Showers tonight and Friday. Lows tonight near 50. Highs Friday in
the low 50s. Chance of rain 80 percent tonight and 70 percent Friday.
Winds northerly 10 mph or less tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecast
· Saturday tllrough Moaday:
Cbanee olonow Oarrlea In the norlbeaot Saturday. Fair Sunday; A
chance olsbowen Moaday. Highs In the tOs Saturday, warming to the
mld-llo to lbe low 80s by Monday. ~ lu the ZO&amp; Saturday, warming
to the mld-30s and low tOs by Moaday.

~::; 51.29

46 oz.

Until Friday

TISSUE~:.k. $1.39
Box

'"

~~~. $1.19

PINEAPPLE JUICE •••••••••••
.

PRICES!
. '
. .

E_LBERFELDS
EROYi
·-

.

15DZ.

DEL MONTE

SPINACH••••2cans

$1.09

PORK. &amp; BEANS~::.9r
- - - --~-'-------+--------..~.....:.....__ _~---+-- :

W&amp;ATIIER FORECA8T-' A bad Ill jiiNdphaU. II '-lit over
11r1J Friday JD.
dadJIIIII wen--hfNnM dao,"-UIIl.W.• War-

!be Mll''"lppl ud Olllo Rmr WU.,. Tlou: ' -, Ull

-ttl ......

ue eapeded wwtlhiiiBIIIIdel wldle~ndap

.m--lbeMIIIwat(APh

t' tl)

EXCAVATING UNDERWAY ~ Excavating Is un4erway at
Bowman&amp; Run for a temporary blgbway to be used while SR 124 Is being
widened, 11«ordlng to Kl!lllly Buckley, project Inspector of the Oblo
Department of Highways, District 10 coostruelioD, Marietta. The malo
blgbway at Bowmans Run will be widened !nun !Sleet to 24 fee~ a distal&gt;'

ce. of 2,788 feet or one-hall mile. Total cilst of the entire project (temporary road and widening oll24) Is $158,435.95. Tbe temporary blghway
will be 20 feet wide. Constructlo Is expected to be completed by next June.
A 144 inch culvert wlU be placed under lbe blghway. Concrete used one
temporary rood will l&gt;e salvaged and used to control erosion, according to
Buckley.

Seek_/robbery suspect
money was in the registers and the
man left the store neeing in a blue
vehicle that is believed to have been
a Chevrolet Nova. It is also helieyed
that another person was in the car.
Investigation of the robbery is continuing.
No figures were given on the
amount or money taken.
.
Meanwhile, Timothy Herdman,
20, Rt. 2, Pomeroy (Kingsbury
Road) was fined $200 and cost and
sentenced to 1~ days in the county
jail lollowi~g his appearance in

The Krnger Store, East Main
Street, Pomeroy, was robbed at 4:00
a.m. this morning.
According to the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department · and the
Pomeroy Police Department a white
male subject \fearing a red bandanna over the ll&gt;wer part of his face
entered tbe store and demanded
money from the cash registers.
' 1be subject held his right 11and
behind his back during ·the entire
time.
The clerk gave the subject what

Meigs County Court Wednesday after pleading guilty to charges of
criminal mischief and · conveying
drugs into a detention facility.
According to the sheriff's department Herdman early Tuesday morning went to the rear of the jail and
broke out a pane of glass and punched a hole in the screen·and forced,
severallll1lllll hags of marijuana into'
the walkWIIY &lt;If the jail. 'In the
'process the bas broke open and Hermand sustanined a cut to his elbow. .
Herdman, in addition to his sen-

tence, must make-restitution for the
glass and screen..
The department is also Investigating the theft or 20 gallon or
gas from two truckS owned by the
Salem Center Fire Department. The
incident occurred over the weekend.
Vicky Nottingtham, Rt. 3,
PllffierOY., reported that a blue 26 in. ch 10 speed bicycle was taken !rom
he•. resldonce. Anyone \..ving any
information i~ asked to contact the
sheriff's department.
!

'.

5

-

f

.

2 Secttons, 14 Pages 15 Cents
A MultimeciJa Inc . Newspaper

Americans said piloting planes·

KEU.OOG'S RICE KRISPIES •• 1.39

STOCK·
AT
.
- ----

.SALE

For~l.59

CORN BEEF HASH••••••••••••

them e)(ceptional values. They are top
..quality chest$, ncit production short-

~

... IN THE

Jr7eather forecast

15 OJ·,

enttne

at

'.

ToDAY

'

JUMBO
Homemade

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 22, 1981

Rookie cop shot to death

PEPPER
Eckrich

•

•

1:30.

Awards by the council are made
on the basis of contributions to
southeastern Obio by participation
aJid leadership in community affairs
by the nominees, Evans said.
The meeting Will begin with a
hospitality bour at5:30and diMer at

A=~~~:yc!=.'=

Vol.lO,No.ll4
Copyrighled 1911

'.

.

•

Eastern's agriculture teacher -~jt.~
The resignation of vocational stitute bus driver.
Mrs. Rita Uncicome was named
agriculture instructor, Danny
Dewhurst, effective Oct. 31, was ac- junior class advisor.
A discussion was held on the par:
cepted at Wednesday's regular
session olthe Eastern Local School · ticipation of seniors who will
graduate in January in prom and
District Board of Education.
Supt. Richard Roberts said efforts graduation activities. At present,
will begin at once to secure a they are not allowed to do so. There
replacement for Dewhurst who is was no action taken on participation
last night.
going to Mason County, W. Va.
The board approved the establishThe board approved as substitute
teachers, Madha Malhotra, Molly ment of a girls' softball program and
Fisher, Roger Spencer, Bonnie Can- a field of games. The field will be
trell, Vinas Lee and Dorthea Petrel made a part of the high school comand named Cindy Rltcliie as a sub- plex.

The board approved tbe at·
tendance

of

coaches

Dennis

Eicbinger, Don Eicbinger and Scott
Wolfe to a basketball clinic at Ohio
State University on Oct: 23. Bids
submit\ed on four surplus buses of
the district were studied but were
tabled for any action until the
November meeting.
Principal James .Page discussed a
cheerleading problem with the
board. It was decided that one junior
varsity cheerleader will be moved to
the varsity cheerleading group and

newrtryouts will be held to secure a
co~Plete

corps of · junior varsity
cheerleaders. ·
There was an e~ive session to

discuss district finances.
Attending were Supt. Roberts,
Principal Page, beard members,
Rnger Gaul, Dorsel Larkins, Jinuny
Caldwell, Bernard Shrivers. and
Deryl Well, treasurer, Mrs. Eloise
Boston, William Buckley, a candidate lor the board of education at
the November election and Mrs.
Jane Eichinger, cheerleader advisor.

Officials predict concensus can be .reached
CANCUN, Mexico (AP) - Despite
signs of sharp discord between rich
and poor countries, U.S. and
Mexican officials are predicting that
"some consensus" wlU be reached
at the unprecedented . 22-nation
economic swnmit.
The North-south summit was
opening . today amid mounting
demands that ,President · Reagan
hack away from his conservative
economic doctrines and demonstrate more flexibility in his approach to the world's poor.
Nevertheless, Secretary of .State
Alexander M. Haig Jr. predicted
that tbe tw&lt;Hiay conference would
yield positive results .
Haig told a news conference Wednesday night that he is increasingly
confident the meeting "will ac)lieve
some consensus in a number of im·
portant areas.''
Haig gave no further details, but
Mexico's Foreign Secretary Jorge
Caslaned&amp; told reporters he expe&lt;:ts
summit participants to ag_ree on
ways that industrialized countries
can help poor countries in two key
areas: food and energy production. ~
Even before. the. swnmit began,
there were few expectations that
any significant agreements would
result. Neither a final conununique
nor a followup conference Is planned.
In a newspaper intei-vlew on the
eve of the conference, Mexican
· PnisidentJ- Lopez Portillo sald tt
would be "futile, Utopian and
·demagtJ81c to expect immediate and
apectacu1ar reaullll" from the summit. But he expreosed hope that the
rneelinC would end the longstanding
stale111ate In North-South
deliberations.

Meslcan govermnent spokesman
Horaclo Floreo de Ia Pena said

Reagan told Lopez Portillo on Wed·
nesday that the success of the sum·
mit."depends on the coope'ration of
all its participants.. .especially on
that or the industrialized countries."
Reagan appeared relaxe&lt;\ as he
prepared for perhaps the most
chaUenging diplomatic assignment
in his nine-month-old administration.

Shortly alter his arrival from

Washington on Wednesday, he slipped into sports clothes and then held
separate meetings with five other
leaders assembled here, including
Lopez Portillo, China's Prime
Minister Zhoa Ziyang and India's
Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. ·
Reagan also took time out for a
Caribbean swim. ,
The format for the summit called
lor an unstructured glve-and-take by

the delegates, and Reagan was to he
one of the early speakers at today's
opening session.
Reagan, laced with a groundswell
of complaints about his policies
toward poor nations, appeared to be
pursuing a lonely course with his insistence that lree -~~ri!je, foreign
investmelrt and expamlea global
trade are the keys to Tbird World
prosperity.

. '

-.

,.

.
U.S.-aliNA TALKB - U.S. Prelldollt a-kl resort lll:ft to atte.l !be North-Soutb 8ummlt. whicb
Relpa rtpt, ewla• wHII Ch'- Prime Mlallter begbls 'l'banday. Mia
In llack are lnZllao Z1Juc darllll a bilateral laacllocm m" 1 In terpceters. (APi..uqlillto) ,
.
~.Jf..-_y. They are viiiUag tile Meslcaa

_...W0111811

.I

I

.,

1

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