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Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio PTA warns
school boards
against attacks

Thursdav. November 12, 1981

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

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

FRIDAY
~

$3995

CARHARTT

Voi.30,No.150
Copyrighted 1981

ANGEL TR~D

THERMALS

MEN'S QUILT LINED

SAVE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

MEN'S SWEATERS
.. . -

FLANNEL

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

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

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

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

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

SALEI

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

SALE PRICES ·

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

24 112.

WOMEN'S
UNIFORMS

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

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

$12.00
$16.00
521.00
527,00

TWO DAY SALE

·

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

•

•

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

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

Jean~

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

·SAUl

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

In-

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

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

$11.91
$14.21
$14.91
$18.71

t

$5.69
$6.39
$8.69

Y SALEI

· sryi.. !W ·boys~ and

ELBERFELDS IN
(

Official under Japanese s.uspicion

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

ulria -

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

~lends,

Nylons. poly colton

rabbllfur.

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

y

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

Ohio lottery winners

.

..

OPEN FRIDAYS
TIL 8:00

$16.19

CHILDREN'
S .COATS
..
AND JACKETS

so.

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

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

J~tans

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

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

Exxon to pull out of Libya

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

'

MEN'S
DRESS SlACKS

FLANNEL SHIRTS

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

Denims - wool blends - corduroy .
Excellent selection.

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

$15.19
$16.79
$19.99
522.39

LD

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

SAVE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

BOYS WESTERN STYLE .

$31.19
$47.99
$55.19
$67.19

CHILDREN'S JEANS SALE

s,

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

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

Columbia returning Saturday

FlANNEL SHIRTS .

JEANS .

.

·

MEN'S $10.95 WRANGLER .

WOMEN'S AND JUNIORS

SALE! FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ·

Uniforms
Uniforms
Uniforms
Uniforms

.

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

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

1

. -

hOOds.

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

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

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

SALE PRICISI

JUNIOR COATS AND
.JACKETS

.

en tine

I

'200REFUND

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

at y

'·

.,

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

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

•

Meigs •Grand Jury
indicts 4 people

Hanes

'

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

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

-

MEN'S INSULATED
COVERALLS

BROWN DUCK

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

indirectlY passad &amp;o consumers.

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

e

FRIDAY-SATURDAY SALEI

SALE PRICES

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

'

SALE PRICES!

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

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

SATURDAY SALEI

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

WORK CLOTHES

e

116.79
SlUt

State weather foreeasts

127-"

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

Ul-"

nesr

OPEN

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

TIL
.•

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

maa, composing room

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

criminal cases.
' '

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

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

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

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

'·~

Probe _arm~d robbery- here

.

�F

Commentary

b·

ment can only do something for you
fn proporUon as It can do something
to you."
Pity, too, that John Adams was so
undereducated. He wrote that
"government turns every con:tlngency Into a means of enhancing
power and the government."
Wood r ow Wilson would
presumably have failed to pass Sen.
Moynlhan's test as an educated
man, in virtue of having written that
"the history of liberalism is the
historY of man's efforts to restrain
the growth of government."
ButMr.Moynlhanwasoffonquite
a toot at Millbrook. He is appalled by
the secretary of education's
statement that ''the federal government does not have responsibility
for education." How can anyone say
such a thing? Our contra! governmentis wonderful!

education." Whoever is doing this is

Showing that he is just mean enough
to guard his anonymity.
: · In his prepared text Mr. Moynihan
·said some provocative ·things, for in·
:stance that the policy docwnent
: recently submitted by Education
Secretary Terrel Bell to the White

ment." uFrom this," said Mr.

"Ours is the oldest republic on ear·
th," said Mr. Moynihan, a claim that
should make news in Switzerland.
Indeed, "no serious person has ever
suggested anything of the sort.
Perhaps the most important act of
the Continental Congress was the

Moynihan, "I conclude that there is
something wanting, individuall or
collectively, in their education.
$omeone should look into this."
· Well, I have. And I'm now left.
wondering what was deficient in the
education of Thomas Jefferson.
Because, of course, he wrote that
only the well-known generality that
that government governs best that
governs least but the less well·
known admonition that the ''govern·

providedadirectfederalsubsidyfor
education." Right, and nobody
should object that the ' federal
government provides for the
education of the boys and girls in
Guam, Guam being a territory of the
United States, even as the territories
northwest of the Ohio River were once that.
You could hardly ask the state of
Rhode Island, back in 17118, to

House was

~~ mostly

nonsense."

Why? Because it was clearly
produced by people "obsessed with
the fear of the national govern-

Northwest

Ordinance,

.which

The Daily Sentinel
111 C011rtStrert
Pomeroy, Ohio
614-9tZ-2151i
OE::V.OTED 11l TilE INTEREST OF 111E MEIGS. MASON AREA

61~

~m~

~v

.r-T"l........J

L._,....... r""T""E!!dt ~

ROBERT L. WINGETt
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

A as(~ 11al Publlsher/ControJier

General M11111ger

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edltor
A MEMBER ol The Au odated Pre85, hiland Dally
·America• New1paper Publlsb,trs Aut~rlatloa. .

PreRR A~t~ odallon

and lhe

LETJ'ERS OF OPINION ~n wtlcomed. They 11hould be leu than 301 wordtloog. A.ll
ltl&amp;tl'lll't! 111b)ut to editing and mu1t be algned with uame, addreas •Dd telephone aumbl!r. No uuJped letten will ~ ptbllshed. l...ettrrt shoald be Ia good tatle, addreulng
luDell, DOl p!I'IOILIIItl~.

How to fix
·Social Security
There are almost as many Social Security reform plans lloating around
as there are groups with an interest in the system.
The National Federation of Independent Business, a Washington-based
organization that represents the country's small businesses, is concerned
with this issue because Social Security taxes have become more coolly than
Income taxes for many of Its members. The federation has offered a plan
drafted by Stanford University economists that is designed to solve some of
the long-range problems of Social Security. This plan Is receiving considerable study on both sides of the congressional aisle.
WUliam Dennis, director of research for the federation, suggestB that
Social Security's problems came about "because so many welfare-type
,programs were grafted onto what was supposed to he an insurance system.
Today, for a retiree over the age of 65, 78 percent of his monthly Social
$eCUrily check represents not annuity but a transfer payment." .
. The federation proposes to separate the Insurance portion of the Social
Security program from what are really income-transfer programs.
. · First the organization would set up what it calls the "Entitled Annuity
Insurance Program." Each worker in the program would get w1 "account"
'Into which would be deposited his and his employer's contributions plus in·
·terest. The worker would withdraw these funds from the program upon
l;l!tirement. He would be entitled to this money regardless of how much he
earned over his working llle.
· Obviously, few workers are going to retire independently wealthy. In
·fact, many will need help well in ""cess of what is available to them from
-their enUUed annuity accounts.
· To help support these &amp;lnior citizens, the federation calls for the
establishment of a separate prognm called "Supplemental Retirement
Benefits." fletirees whose assets fell below a certain level would be eligible
for support payments under this prognm according to their needs; many
current welfare programs operate In this manner.
Under this plan, payroll and self-employment 'taxes would go only Into
·the insurance program. The supplemental benefits would be financed out of
i!eneraltax revenues.
• This ls only fair, in the opinion of the federation: "Participants In an In..,urance prognm should pay only for what they receive and receive only
1!fhattheypayfor."
.
: The plan would replace only the current Old Age and Survivora InIIUI'IIIlCO program. It would not affect,the Oisablljty Insurance and Health In·surance progralll8 or the Supplemental Security Income benefits for the
llllnd and the dllabled.
.
: The federation pnlp08es that the plan be phased in beginning In 1991
:!Jecauae mOll workers over 56 !)ave already planned their retirements under
the pmenl Social. Security system. The new plan would encompua workers
retiring after Jan. 1,1991.
. Whatabout CQits? Workers currently pay 7.15 percent of their Income 88
~c taxes; their amployers match this amount. uSocial Security COBia ~
tlnues riling, the wnount is expected to Increase to 21 percent by the year
lJOOII, Tbe federation forecasts that FICA taxes would gradually fall to about
~percent during the first 10 years of Its plan and then rlae gradually to lev• I
~at abouU percent.
· · The federation's plan is politically explosive becaliiM! 11 woUld .
.temlally reduce bellellta to retirees, espectally u- who bave 111et
,-eUrement. And IInce the IIJIII)Iemental Pf'OtP'IIII would be funded • of
. general tax revenue, b11110111 would have to be found In this era of growing

ilefldts.

shoulder expenses of territories that
belonged to all the states that had
underwritten the Articles of eonfederation. Significantly, the Northwest Ordinance proVided for the
evolution of the territories to where
they would become slates _; and forfelt any educational subeldy from
thegovernmenl.
But Mr. Moynihan was marching
toward a point, and II Is an in. teresting one. In the first place, back
in 19'1t he voted against making the
Department of Education a separate
Cabinet portiolio, becauae he felt It
belonged to HEW, within whoRe
huge embrace it was better protected.
But now he argues that those who
believe that non-public schools
should receive tuition credits should
not argue for the reduction of federal
aid to public schools. "Ought not
proponents of aid to non-public
· schoolS state right away that equal
means equal; that they will not accept aid for non-public schools at the
expense of the public systems, and
further, that if there is to be no
federal aid to public schools, then
there should be none to non-public

gOYemlllellt came IUbstanUally to
the buaiiMu of IUblldlzlng public
elementary and aecondary schools.
It wu not neceuary then, and lan't
necessary now, to get federal money
for schools that have always been
staiHupported. 3) Tbe idea of
tuition-tax credit Is to return to
parenta alreedy paying taxes to sup-

Saturday night, history will be
made as the first annual Soothem
Valley Athletic Conference girls'
basketball preview ·at Kyger Creek
High School kicks off the 1981-82
basketball season.
This .first-time event begins at 7
p.m. and will hopefully ljlegin a
prosperous era of girls' basketball
action in the area:
· · The evening will start with the
·traditional Eastern-Southern rivalry
slated for the opener, while Hannan
:Trace plays Southwestern, and Nor-

port the public schooll a part of this · are only juaUfled ao long aa there are

IRibeldy, In order to permit them to IRibeldies for non-private school
usera II on the order of saying that
patronlle achools of their choice.
the
aid for dependent children ean't
If such a IUbaidy could be conbe
given
.W.. you a1ao COII)e out for
trived by the states - by lowering
aid
to
non-dependent
chUdren.
their taxes or granting credits Ah,
well.
Sen.
Moynihan
ls Iota of
then that arrangement would be per·
.
fun,
and
will
be
wise
again
soon
after
fectly satisfactory. But to .say that
his
re-election.
tax credits for private school users

r

Bizarre overthrow plot threatens
Haiti'S dictator________;__~____Ja_ck_Anders_....:___on
tract with some Milan businesmnen.
While he was there, he met some
Haitian exiles who want to get rid of
Duvalier.
Dutcher agreed not only to recruit
mercenaries in Britain ·and sOuth
Africa but to purchase arms for the
coup. The cost was calculated at ~
million, which the two Itallim companies agreed to advance. A source
close to the deal ellplained that the
Italians had been promised
lucrative construction contract&amp; In
return for financing the coup ..
The plotters have picked
Duvalier's •succeasor. He is Roland
Magioire, a fonner Haltaian army
lieutenant and the nephew of paul
Magloire, who was president of Haiti
from 1950 to 191i8. Scheming against
Baby Doc and his late father, Papa
Doc Duvalier, is nothing new for
Roland Maglolre. He has been Involved In several attempted coups.
In the late 1960s, he spent a year in
jail in the Bahamas as the result of a
botched invastion of Haiti.
Dutcher could not be located for
comment, but 'Maglolre returned a
call from Montreal late one night.
Surpriaingly, he did not deny that a
coup w'l" being planned. AI first, he
professed not to know Du.tcher, but
then he said, "Maybe I do, but under
some other name." When presented
with details of the plot, he said coyly,
"Maybe It 1s possible that something
is going to happen." .
Sources in the Haitian exile com-

munlty tell me that Magloire has
always been committed to the idea
of overthrowing Duvaller by force.
In fact, they say, his Insistence on a
military ouster led to the breakup of
the "Haitian Coalition," an emigre
group dedicated to Duvaller's downfall. Maglotre's opponents wanted to
arrange a less bloody coup within
Haiti.
Whoever wina - Duvalier or
Magloire - it seems likely the wret·
ched Haitian people will still lose.
Exile sources say that a Magloire
victory would merely replace one
dictatorship with another. A
military showdown between the two
adversaries would be a contest the
long-suffering Haitian populace
could · view with evenhanded
dispaasion - like the henpecked
frontiersman of legend, who greeted
the sight of his wife and a .grizzly
bear locked In mortal combat, with
encouraging cries of "Go, .wife! Go,
bear!"

Footnote: The anti-DuvaUer plot
is one bit of slrulduggery that cannot
be laid at Ed Wllaon's door. Dutcher
quit Wilson's employ when the
Haitian deal was cut.
SECRET ARMS DEALS : The
State Department has been secretly
providing milltary equipment to
foreign countries for more than 20
years In apparent violation of the
Foreign Aaalstance and Anns Ex·
port Control Acla.
The boys in Fosgy Bottom have

been doing this by "lending"
military hardware under long-term
lease arrangements, without

Sandinistas, the White HoUle and
the Defen.te Department."
"t1rnnumn. Could you be more
specific?"
" The White House keeps leaking
stories that the President Is going io

fire me."
"And to your kn~ledge, he
isn't?"
"He told Jack Anderson he

wasn't.''
"Well, that should be enough

assurance.''
"Everyone around the President
is talking behind my beck. Every
time I announce a foreign policy,
they correct me. When 'I loc* IIIII

ih Gallla ,faces Kyger· Creek in the

ther talented girls returning from
other two matcb-ups..
,
laal Y\llll''sll-lleague chwnpionahip
for an eight-team, 14-tlame schedule
Vetenul Coach Sue Thompsoil of team. The Smith twlna, Elaine and beginning Nov. 29. ~are being
Eastern.will be led by three retur- Renee, are the lone l!lelljor leaders en . made to play the g&amp;mel at Wahama
ning seniors, point guard Tammy this year's squad. .Last (1888011 .. High School and the New Haven
lluCison, Sarah Goebel, and Cassie Elaine wu an Honorable Mention Community Building on Wednesday
Sheets. Joining the three upper selection within the league.
'
evenings and Sunday afternoons.
clSBsmen are four juniors, tluW
This , -sOn Southern will be ' Anyone wishing to enter a team
sophomores, and a freslunan, wHo l:oadled by two ~ coaches of may contact Tim Davis at 67:&gt;-1333,
forjn a solid foundation for a good · the h8rdwOod, who are returning af· Gary Clark at 882-2328 or Jeff
seasOn.
ter abeences as cage mentors. Coach
Southern will be led Into action by Hilton Wolf,e, Jr. and his ~r,
laal year's league MVP Mel Weese, Larry Wolfe, will handle coaching
a ·junior point guard and a host d. duties at SHS, substituting for
Veteran Coach Connee Enslen wbo
is on a leave of absence.
All in all, the outlook is bright for
both Meigs County schools, as well
as the SAVC in general Saturd!ly
night should be just a limited
-prevtew of what looks like a strong
and exciting·withln·the league.
Following Is a team roster for both
clubs :
finished 10.16 ovrall arid :;..g irr the
e ..tern
Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic
Yr.
Name
Conference a year ago. Coach Tammy Hudson
4
Roland WlerwiUe says his team is Sarah Goebel
4
4
much . improved over · a year ago Cassie Sheets
B&amp;ky
Ambrose
3
·because they have more depth.
Lisa Collins
3
3
After Saturd!ly's battle at Berea, Rhonda Riebel
Janelle Elv·
3
the two teams will compete the Dee Dallev
2
borne-away series by laking to the KrisWilson
2
2
Lyne Center hardwoods next Wed- Kelly Whitlatch
1
' nesday night at 7:.30 p.m. Free Angie Spencersouthern.
tickets will be .made avallable to Nal)1e
Yr.
3
Meigs County residents that night as Mel Weese
2
· part of a special "Meigs County Laren Wolfe
Cindy §.vans
3
'Night" promotion in that area. Tonia Salser
3
Ticketa must be picked up In ad- Julie Houdashelt
1

MAC standings

Wild Bird Seed
and I
Sunflower Seeds

job, it INS my underatandlng I would
be the only voice talldng for the
United States/' .
"And you keep hearing other

vOices."

Soviet Union In Europe that the
United States would fire a nuclear
weapon over water flnt to show that
we meant business. The next. day
Weinberger went up on the Hill and
laid '"' had no plana to do any such
thing. He made me sound · as If I
didn't know what I was billdng

"I don't hear them. l~ee u.n on
teleVision."
"Have you aall:ed the President to
slop them?"
. about."
"11 there such a NATO plan?"
"Yes, I have, and he uys he's
"To my knowledie there II."
done it. But that doesn't seem to
"BUt Weinberger said to his
dissualhl them. There's this fellow knolrledl• there wun't. What did
Dick Allen, Wbo Is the head of the White Houle say?''
·National Security, and then there Is
"Tbey laid, to their knowledge, we
Ed Meeae, and Jim lllbr, and Mite were both right. There had been an
Deaver, who keep puttlnc out stort• option to do this, but It was rejecthat I'm emile and I don't make ted."
any 'senae. And there's Secretary of
Defense Calpar Weillberller who
"Hnunnnn. Have you discussed
'keeps correcting everytbing [ lly. tlU with Weinberller?"
·
He wanta to mike me loot llupld."
"Why abould I taJk to him? He
"Would you give me an exam- doesn't talk to me."
ple?"
"Then I '180 881U111e Weinberger
"Well, I testllled 011 the HID the and you are not coordinating foreign
1other day lhlt I n - alnr with the Policy."

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--J!oJJLuot

ships are ''missing.''

Elrly W~y MfRd l.ap:

• I'll.

1'colo

In another case, Argentina was
gien $3 million worth of radar equipment, and has shown no inctlnation'
to return it.
The State Department is reportedly reluctant to bring pressure on
the freeloaders for fear they would
turn to the Soviet Union for
replacements If we demand the
return of our materiel.
But some members of Congress
are upset at these under-the-counter
ai'm!l deals with governments of
questionable human rights
. reputations. Sen. Edwiltd Zorlnsky
O.Neb., has offered an amendmeni
to the anns control act that would
require presidential app1'9Val for
milllary 108118. Meanwhile, the
secret traffic continues, with little or
· no accounting to Congress.

Srnl~NeiPI Moton

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"He's not the only one. Tbe media

i

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11·22·81

.ANY FURTHER
FOR YOUR

are a1ao out to get me. ~·re
illwiys making fun of the way 1 explain thlnga. They've never forgiven
me for working for Richard Nixon,"

II

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25080

"He's allll mad at me becauae I
said I was in charge of the government when the Prealdent was ahot."
"So we can aaaume then that
Welnberller is one of those who
would like to see you fired."

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notifying Congress as the law
requires. Countries that can 'I afford
to pay are allowed to use U. S. equipment without payment, so the loans
amount to donations.
Chile, for example, was supplied
with seven military support ships in
the 1960s. The vessels, worth some
$14 million, were to have been retur·
ned by the mid-1970s, but successive
Chilean governments have refused
to give them hack. Sources told my
reporter Corky John.IGn the current
Chilean regime claims the seven

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·GRAl A
SELf.:BASTIN~

"Why do you thinlt there are so
many peopl~ against you?"
"I have no Idea. That's why I
came Iosee you, Doctor."
"Well, as long as you have the
President's ~onfldence, why don't
you Ignore everyone else and go
about your business?"
"How can I be sure I have the
President's confidence,?"
"You laid he told Jack Anderson
he did."
"Yea, but Jack Andenon's out to

getme,too."

•..the Bird Feed Specialists

WELCOME TO

MW.AIIwrkuCealereaee

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They're out to get him_.________Art-:---B_uc...:.....hwa_td

"Everyone?"
"The Russians, the Israeils, the

=~=::~~

Bend Area Jaycees.
Tentative plans for the league are

RIO ·GRANDE - Rio Grande's
Redmen, fre!ih off a convincing 86-H
victory over Obio University·
Lancaster In their opener last
weekend, wlll try to make it ~ on
the young season Saturday night
when they travel to Kentucky for a
noiH!OIIference bout :.rith the Berea
College Mountaineers.
Coach ·John Lawhorn's powerful
·front ·tine of Dan Curry, Kevin
Castleman, and Watson McDonald
' did most of the damage ·to, ,the
visitors laal Saturday combining ·tor
42 poiniB anq 31 reboWlds. Curry
finished , with ·16 polnta and 13
rebounds, Castlamen 16 points and vance.
4
Renee Smith
M ichell e Johnson
3
nine rebounds and McDonald· 10
Tickets may be obtained by con·
Smith
·
4
.points and nine rebounds for the wil)- tactlng the Rio Grande tioket office Elaine
Debbie Michael
2
. ners.
Jenny Bentley
2
· at (614)~~
Karen Hemsley
1
However, Berea is expected to
provide a bit stiffer competition for r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:=IJ
the Redmon. The Mountaineers

The answer to that is: no. I) Oilviously iflhe population of the public
schools diminishes, so should their
expe~. 2) As Moynihan concedes,
it was only in 1964 that the federal

"Come in, Mr. Secretary. Would
you prefer the couch or a chair?"
urll stand, Doctor, if it's all the
same to you."
"Suit yow'Self. What seems to be
the trouble?" ·
''Everyone is against me. ''

baskelballleague is being formed In

Redmen hit road
for cage ba~tle

schools?"

WASHINGTON - An incredible
plot is in the works to end the dictatorial regime of Haitian President
Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" DuvaUer.
There are the bizarre Ingredients:
An American soldier of fortune, a
handpicked team of international
mercenaries, a group of Haitian
exiles and some Italian businessmen
looking for a fast buck.
Duvalier is known to be worried at
the point of ·paranoia over the
possibility that he will be
assassinated. He has been publicly
warned that there is a plot against
him. In late October three light
planes flew over his unhappy country and dumped tons of literature
pr&lt;&gt;&lt;:lainilng !he dictator's immlnent
· downfall.
Whether it was the ltalo·
American-Haitian plot that was the
specific cause of Baby Doc's alarm
is not clear. Maybe he doesn't even
knoW about this one. But here's the
story, as reported by my psoctates
Dale Van Alta and Bob Sherman.
The soldier of fortune is John Dutcher, a rugged 40-year-old ex·
Marine and self-proclaimed
assassin who used to work for
fugitive ex-CIA agent Edwin Wilson.
I reported last August that Dutcher
once identified himself as a "mer·
cenary specializing In protection,
tr~ining and hootage retrieval
missions for foreign governments."
In mid-September, Dutcher was
sent by Wilson to northern Italy to
negitoate a Libyan construction con-

An U!dependent adult men's

e held Saturday nigh~

Moynihait at Millbrook________--"-_Wi_il__,....lia_m_F._Buc_k_ley_·J_r.
. Daniel Patrick Moynihan was the
;speaker at Pie 50th annlv'rsary of
·\he Millbrook School in FOR's home
·county and said some amusing
ihlngs, and some strange ones,
though to be sure the newspaper accounts do not sharply distinguish be~ tween what he said at the school and
· what he said while making politics in
: the town of Millbrook. At one or the
·other he said that the Reagan administration had brought "a time of
ine8MeSS in American llle when the
very idea of education commences
: to be 8BS8ulted."
· He did not make it clear who exac: tly in the Reagan administrstion is
:aasaulting "the very idea of

2

First ·e&amp;
a irls· cage preview to~ ::;k7:;;;~!~~;;~-r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~=:;;;=
WILD BIRD SEED HEADQUARTERS

Page-:!--The Deily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, November 13, 1981

TIMER

Half Price! 3-Hea~ Cassette Deck With Double
·Dolby NR SCT-31 by Reall•tlc

GRA.~J)P~ SEZ,

. .

'.

. "Be sure me Turkey you buy
.
, has the Gmnd A ~I
with no
'bmlses or parts m~s.~ing."

·

.

.

1

'

'

•

VAUGHA-N'S
Cardinal
,.

.. Where Friendship
and Savings Go
Hand
.._ __ . in Hand

IUPI• MAIIKITI
•

We feature U.S.D.A. Cholet Beef
Food Sta
Welcome

..

Reg.
. 421.95

PAICES

VAP.V AT INDIVIDUAL STORES AND

• Smoolh-Open~tlng Ceaaette Trantport
• Record• end _Monltora With Dolby
Nol11 lleclucllon
Now's the time io buy a top-of-the-line deck!
Has selector for normal, FeCr. CrOo or
metal tape. Bias control adjusts lor optimum
with any cassette. Twocolor,
LED peak-hold level
left 'channel . Also
miss it! 114~t4

.-

�.·
.. .

.

Fri!lay, November 13, 1981

'Frldey, Novomlltr 13, 1.9!1

Boxing matches slated Saturday ·
Boxing matches will be held Satorday, Nov. 14, at Meigs High School
beginning at 7:311 p.m. 8pOII80rl!d by
the Meigs 11o11ng Club.
Clubs part,iclJ!!Itin&amp; wlll be
Glouster, ~,' "Parkersburg,
Ripley and Meigs. Danny Clarkson
of the Ravenswood Club Ia reported
to be very popular among boxing

f8111.

(USPII-1
A~lfMwl'
#,I.e.

VIDEO SEMINAR, leachlng by
word of faith, Bible school
Friday at 7 p.m. Featuring Fred
Fri~"'· ·Christian Fellowahip, 383
North Second Ave,, Middleport.

Local bowling

M-0-

Pvaltl'l)' Bowllq t.DCI

.....

Nev, t, &amp;MI

.

I'll.

G. andJ. Auto Parta

1111RD GRADE PARTICIPANTS- Parllcipallllg Ia lbe recent punt,
Jllllll, and kick competition were y01111gsten from Meigs County. The
event was spoDSOred by lbe Meigs Athletic Booolen and held at Meigs
Junior High Stadium in Middleport. Third grade participants were, 1-r,
Rob Fields, first place, Jason Smith, second place, Roy Johnson, tblnl

place and MlcbeUe Frasb.

FOUR111 GRADE PAJlTICIPANTS- F.rlll tp'He ptyloell 1n1m
Meigs C01111ty wbo partlclpaled Ia lbe .....,DI punt, paaa, llDd Idol&lt; eompetlllon were, lrollt row, 1-r, Smu O,dlo, tiJlnl plaee, Eddie Crooks,
...,ond place 111111 Cbrta Stnart, first place; back, HaDk ClelaDd, JobD
Ander08n, Randy Hawley, P. J, Glbbo, Matt Erwin, Salle CaueU, Robblil
Hswk and Kevia Burgess. Ableat wu Jay Mk:ar!Y, 'I'M eveDiwu apon.sored by Meigs Athletic Boooten and wu beld at Melp Stadhun Ia Mid·
dleport. Tropblea were provided by Vaughan's Canllaal llDd Pawell's
Super Valu.
·

~

No. 5
No.3
Simmons Ollis, C.dlllac,

21

andChev.

C. ond D. Pennzoil
211
Mar'slnc.
25
llicl&gt; Ind. pme - Jwoe Lomborl 111: Lenora

P08'1MAS'f!!R:

Hlch ind. thne-lamt• - Lencra McKnight

8tJB8CII1PT10N ll.tTEII
lyCan'ler•IIMora.te

411; Betty Whitlatdi 4751 j Brendl Haggy .....
Hilh ....., pme - Mo. 5117: Slmmona Old.o,
C.dilllcandChtv. nl; No. 37'l4.
Hi&amp;h learn three-pmet- G. 1nd. J . Aulo P1rlll
2214: No. 32271: Nov. 12301.

.........

ll.Gil·

OneM-

OneYear

PIUC1!8

lloily ......... . : . . • • • . • . . . . . . . .

~home e~rrierlei"Vke lll ~-

MAILBI1118CIIIPftON8
Olio ... WM Yil"'WW

111.10
117.10
IIUO

3 Month

sa month
1Year

.GO•

IMonlh

=

IMQOth

.G01
.GO

IYur

.. really did,'' Fischer said. 1 'I've very

disappojn1ed. This is my third disap. pointment of the year; the strike
was the first, and then not making
:. the playoffs - and this is the third.
· "It's hard to blast Fernando, but I
think all the sports writers went on
. lbe first half ofthe season:"
. Seaver got eight first-place ballots
for the National League award to the
. top pitcher of the year - the same as

doing it, the numbers will he there." .
Seaver, 36, has been the Cy Young
winner three times. He said that
awards are not as big a milestone as
were ,when he was younger.
"I've gotten to the point' in my
career where postseason awards are
not as important as they once were,''
he said. "The older you get, the day·
to-day involvement in winning is
more important.
"The one thing I'd personally like
to do is reach 300 wins (he needs 41).
That's the one personal goal I'd like
to be able to pitch long enough and
weU enough to do."
Fischer said Seaver, who was 14-2
with a 2.55 earned run average, may
may find it increasingly difficult to
be a Cy Young contender.
''He may never get another whack
at it.'' Fischer said. "With his age
now, it's going to be tough."

Enquirer in a trans-Atlantic
votes, also the same as Valenzuela.
telephone caU that he knew the
But Vale~uela , who was 13-7 with balloting would be close.
a 2.48 earned run averag~. got one
"In the back of my mind, I thought
more second-place vote, and that three guys could have deserved it;"
made the difference for the 21-year he said. "My first reaction was that I
old Los Angeles Dodger rookie. A thought Steve Carlton had a better
panel of 24 spi&gt;rts writers represen- chance than Valenzuela. But you
ting each of the National League · could have put three names in a hat
cities voted.
and then picked the winner."
"Taking nothing away from Ferc
Carlton, of the Philedelphia
nando Valenzuela, I truly be~eve Phillies, finished third to Valenzuela
Tom Seaver deserved the award," and Seaver.
McNamara said. "There wasn't any
"With . the e~ception of three
doubt in my mind. I think the award games, I though! I pitched very
should have gone to him."
·• well," Seaver said before leaving for
Seaver, who left for France for a Paris. "I was consistent, and to me
family vacation on the eve of the an- that's what it's all about. If you're
nou,ncement, told , The Cincinnati consistent and keep doing it and

'

:Wisconsin, Michigan have
edge in Big 10 title race
By JOE MOOSHIL
for the league lead with f&gt;-2 records.
AP Sports Wriler
But Wisconsin doesn't need help
Although si~ teams retain from anyone in knocking off
. mathematical possibilities of win- . Michjgan. AU the Badgers have to do
: ning or sharing the B1g Ten cham· is win their last two games against
· pionship with only two weekends of Iowa and Minnesota and they will
the season remaining, · Wisconsin clinch atleast a share of the title and
lilld Michigan hold the upper hand in their fans can make Rose Bowl
the hectic race.
arrangements.
Wisconsin and Michigan are tied
If Michigan wins its last two

We would like to thank
e.veryone who helped
in any way during the
loss of our loved one.
Your thoughtfulness
was deeply appre·
cia ted.

games and ties Wisconsin, the

Badgers would get the ilod because
the first tie-breaker is how the teams
did in head-t&lt;&gt;-head competition. And
Wisconsin beat Michigan the first
week of the season.
But if Wisconsin falters, Michigan
can ·capture it all with victories
against Purdue and Ohio Stale.

,....,,,,

THE ROY MAYER ·

10

2--iO,OOV BTU GAS HEATER
warm Morning w/Blower, like new.

6-N-~w_W_,_OO~D_H_EA_TE_R_S_A....' c_os-t_slE~v:
6 LAUNDRY STOVES' " 4 Caps" _,A~~
3 USED REFRIGERAJORS AND UP
. $15000
Coppertone GAS RANGE
1-36"

;ri:~~air~El~~!~ol£e!AN~la N!ce $25()00
.1-White40" G.E. RANGE
$1Q()l'
RUTLAND FURNITURE
Rutl;md

0H
.. S"" th•• Gr;~t&lt;: lluy .
for some Great Buys. '

1----------------.;_.,-----.--:--

2RIBEYE
STEAK DINNERS

,,...,,..~ . ,,

Complete with
Pudding or Gelatin·
and Beverage ·

Rtdwood.

(~milk)

Dinners also Include ...
•All-You-Can-Eat •
Salad Bar
• Baked Potato
• Warm RoU with Butter

•1111 E•
.

Comol-

Upper littt ld.

(across flot11 lhe Airport)
Gelllpolls,.Ohio
Nnw yau no n ~"t a ll 1h
oftlwnrtllin., I SUPER

HERm:s in • .,:U.I
col !«tort' ..,riQ of pat·
lookln1 pl..tk ru~

, SU PERMAN'~.
BATMAN"' ROBIN•~

WONDER WoMAN••:

Ulda,.

•lfreren1

Mil,...

-tl.

$29gao
EAC

5 LB.WITHWILD
BIRD SEED· ,
PulCHAsl OF MY , -· ..

••

Contact any band member, band
booster member or Director
James WUhelm, 98f&gt;.4379, to order.
BOOK FAIR underway at
Salem Center Elementary
Sch~l. l;looks may be purchased
at saturday's fall festival in the .
gymnasium, Saturday, 4 to 9 p.m.
Variety of books offered with
profits to go for classroom supplies. ·

SCOITISH Rite of Gallia and
MeigS COunty will hold their an. · nualjoint dinner at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple ' at 6:30 p.m.
Wedriesday. The dinner is free to
all members. Those in Ga,Uipolis
are to caU D. A. Byers, 445-1948 or
in Meigs County, Clarence . J.
&gt; Struble at ~I before Saturday, Nov. 14, for reservati~.

Monday
MIDDLEPORT Business and
Professional Women's Club, 7:30
p.m. Monday at the Middleport
Libnjry. Phyllis Flowers, district
director, to be a guest. Young
Careerisl to he selected.
HYSELL RUN "- Revival at
Run Holiness Church
Monday through Friday. Joseph
Quinn speaker. Services nightly
at 7:30 p.m. Special singing by
the 1 Gospel Jubllaires. Pastor
Rev. :rheron Durham invites the
public.
OFFICERS will be installed at
a meeting of Pomeroy Chapter
1118, Order of the Eastern Slar,
7:30 Monday night at the
, Pomeroy Maaonic Temple..
.the Hysell

.

' Churches
BRADFORD
Meigs Cpunty'
of - Christ,
Men's
FeUowshlp will meet at Bradford
ChurchMondlyat 7:30p.m:

21

·MODERN 'SUPPLY

FRI.-THURS.

De~~!: Hampton, legislative chairman, reported on a new law, the
PrisonerofWarHelpBenefitsActof
1981, which states that ronner
Prisoners of War captured as few as
30 days may now have certain
disabilities accepted as service-

held in conjunction with
American Education Week and
National Chl!dren's Book Week.
The fair will be open hun 8 a.m.
to 3:30p.m. and during the P1'0
meeting Tuelday night. Books
will be on di8play in the gym at
Salisbury.

""'

·~---

I!!JOc ..._"....,...,~ co.~~e

ONE SHOW AT 8 PM . SUNDAY MAT
INEE
AT 2

PM

r-======~=:--:--=..1~~~~~~~~~~~~
2
1977 FORD GRANADA. ~-~~~-.~~ -~~~~r:.~~~~: ~:~·- ~-~: ;.~ .12195
Auto. P . B.. P .S .• white. good cond.
1975 DODGE CORONET....•••......•••.•.•.•••.••......
11495
0

1978 FORD LTD ... . .. :?.'; ~-a·'·~'. ?.·.~~~~: -~~: !:~~ ~:~ ~~-"-~. 12495

1977 PINTO CRUISING STATION WAGON •••••• ., ••. 11995
Auto., PB, PS.

2
1976 PLYMOUTH DUSTER •••••••••••••• .~~-~::.'.~~~" 11595

1975 MERCURY MONTEGO.~~-r:.~~~~!?~;.~~!~_-; .~~~~-~; sg95
P .B.I P .S., auto., air.
1199
1976 OLDS CUTLASS ······················~···········
5

1975 FORD LTD:.................................~?~~ ... '895
TRUCK

EDUCATION WEEK - Middleport Mayor Fred Boffnum signed a
proclamation deslguatlng the· weefl of Nov. 15-Z3 u N•tlonal Education
Weefl for representatives of lbe American Legion AUIIIlJlry. Pictured
wltb tbe mayor are left, Mn. Lula HamptoD, chairman of eduatlon, of .
Lewlll Manley Aulllary 283, which has plaaned several events cluriDg the
week, and Mn. Erma Bendrtcb, president of lbe American Leglnn
Auxlliary, .feeney-Bennett Post 128.
·

1975 FORD F-250 CLUB CAB ••••••••• :':".'?;;~-~.:!:.5••• '1595

*********THIS WEEK ONI. Y"***********

!
~
!

·Asbury group meets
A Thanksgiving offering was
taken at the Tuesday night meting of
the Asbury .United Methodist Church
held at the Syracuse church with
Mrs. Nancy Merrifield as hostess.
Mrs. Mary Cundiff, program
·. leader, entitled her program,
"Praise for Light, Praise for Dark·
ness" alter which the offering was
taken. It was voted to order special
Cbrlstmas "Have a Good Day" tra&lt;&gt;ts. ,Mrs. · Margaret Eichinger had
devotions on Thanksgiving and it
was reported that 66 sick and shut-in
callS had been made.
The . Christmas dinner and party

was discussed and it was decided to
have a potluck at the church on Dec.
1. There wiU be a $2 gilt exchange
and each person attending is to take
toys for the needy.
Letters from missionaries in
Argentina and Singaport were read
by Helen Teaford thanldn'g )he group
for remembering their birthdays. A
workshop to be held at tbe Pomeroy
United Methodist Church was an·
nouncedfor Nov.19.
The spiritual life closing was by
Mrs. Opal Kloos who read "A Frank
Mixup", and closed with prayer.
Refreshments were served.

The lzaak Walton Club will
have its deer slug shooting
match at the lzaak Walton
Farm, 3112 miles South of Chester on Shade River Rd., starting at 1 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 15th
and will continue each Sunday
at the ·same time until deer
season. It will be bench and off.:.
hand shooting. prizes will be
Turkey, Ham and Bacon.

t-I~==============:::::::::::::::::::::~~

1974 BUICK •••••••••••••..••.••••••••••••••••••••• 1495
1974 OLDS 4 DR •••••••••.••.•••• : ••••• ~~-".'.~~~~: •. 1495

1975 FORD CLUB CAB ....................~~:~ ••• 11495

~ 1974 CHEVY
11-

'

Vz TON·PICKUP..'.t~-~~~:~:~~~?.~~~~;.SS95
6cyl.

A better way_ to beat the high
.
cost ol financing.
·

Fcnl lf'd your ~'"8 FOI'II Oellll'l .,.
~ ......, up k!nl oo IMII!I olllwl ~ ­
tiling. hiQhQI INtiOf new l!li:l l lfW:IJ!JI9;1 cart
MOIIelf 10 I*JI ~ h , _ Clf 1'01.1...0 h

-,OUC¥1-..,...
ng.

ml&gt;r'llh'ypa)'l'l'lei'Uby

~ 11\e .....
10 \'011- pa'fl'*1l aiiCI
i:X;lrJ'IIIMigleiiiObloglorl-..tf&gt; Cll~ld'oolcll
~lmmFoul. ho.,..,...chcli::l

CASH UP.FRONT. o,tlei'l m•ke )OU w!1l ~ 10
tour yMIIIO Qt1 \'OYf lui mor.tyf WOM BIA

-

No;JI

....

8 ~~ ........ perc_,.9 r,aft , tllll CIOSII

MAM.E YOUA IUTOEAL. ThlnQ)" on Wll~
llul'll)redooldoliarllfiU""''JJ S.v• l 700on
Amenci'II'IIIWell two-sui• lrool·..t!HI an....
FortiEXP Sa._..uptol500onii'On1 ·1¥hee!"'"''
r , dEIOOII Anti- seoooo.~ornenct~ ·.,,_,
I)OOI.IIw SPOI'tl Cll ' Ford Mutt•rlll · O,ilel
(l0f'IIIIOJ1IOI'l I'IIIV t WII(I CUIIOiner Pfiel. \.lmiT
INipe&lt;CUII,.,.

8UY OA OADEA NOW. To g.e1 ,aurWu•ol

Fore! I Up-fronl Money, -y(IUI'FOI'CI Deeltr n

_ ,.

buylromoiDdl "'""""'~now­

MOI'IE YI\LUE HEWS. Aemember,i! I""' ••
11x11tiroQ kw 1 moc-tLZe~ur. Fore Feii'IIIOr'll
fu!ura&lt;l-door IUd UII. , tlidiOII r-Oid lowe&lt; t\1.,
IUI~II'. 1 0nQ)ollhel. Ford 11 oflemg Sf*.al
~...,. ~on,..ny 0!1\11 PQilUllf ITIOOell
So Ill aur11D !hoct out 111 tho! ••~uot ._,loom
fore! lOr 11M:!.

--·-·,,.... . . .

'~OI ...... UI

47l3.1r·

ESCORT

$500
_...,_

UT 11WT

UP-FRONT

onel bull

~.

!Khollt&gt;l"~

GL moGelal

33~*

MUSTANG

No. 094 1981 CADILLAC COUPE DEVIU£

lM liT IIII'G

F&lt;OI'I ·01"'1 ....,IOUI""h"
~~"-..,..,H'IIf' •

an GUI- QT !~dan~

...-blcll

... , ..._• ., ,.._ ....,., .. IKI

S60C)

UTIIWT

lMUTIIHI

r"'" l'loQIIm.teiOt '"ICl "'91'
loCIWnllnl " '"' lhiO IIUO WX&gt;11UO

Personals
Mr. and Mr8. Fred Goeglein have
returned from a visit in Plainfield,
Ind., where·they -were flllesls Of her
brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and
Mn. Phlllp Stolp. From there they
went to l,eelnston to vtslt the Lee.
Chapel and M-.un, and on to
Wi1Uani11burg lor alolu:ol the Carter
Plant.tlon, l1ld ChlrlottesyUie lor a
vlalt to the Old MontieeUo. Before
returnlilg home they vlaited In
JIIJIII!II!own l1ld Yorkinwn, Pa.

204 Condor Sf.

Pomeroy, Oh.
Phone: 992·2'174
NEW WINTER HOURS:
Opon Tuoa. thru F rl.
tAM. tits P.M.
hi. 9 A.M. 1111 P.M.

I

1976 PONTIAC CATALINA •..•.•..••••••••••••••••,•••• 11795

Salisbury Elementary Monday
through Friday. The fair Is being

.

.H~l!f WtD BIID ~~

( 01.0\' .

0

Auto. , PB/Ps. Air. Black, 45,000 miles.

Fml ~.,.,ClOt!&gt; "''f"''J' pll(iel -

•1111• tcod C.~Jollon'

SHI\ZAM '• , THE FLASH••they'~ all ht~ In eu:i1illl
flll l..-olor !P't11hlce. iuat • t.hty
lfiiiUT 1n t.he cornice. So dart ,CV.f
Cllllec:tlon
81'11!1" ~.

CHEESE AND sausage sale aU

COilll&lt;!Cted without having to furnish
medical proof of. that fact. Some
legislation, she said, applies to Viet·
nam veterans who were exposed to
Agent · Oranse or radiation . for
nuclear testinsafter World War o.

and refreslunents to foUow at the
homeofMrs. FlorenceRichards.
r-----------~
Mrs. NeUie Winston wiD send out
get-weU and sympathy cards to
members and othen of the com•
f},,,jf,. "
munity. Mn. Harper, Americanism
chainnan, conducted a question and
answer period on Ohio and also gave
tips on flag etiquette. Mrs. Zuelelia
Smi th, Mrs. w·1nston, Mrs . Hampton, and Mrs. Bowles gave infonnatlon on filling out reports
which are due from the chairmen by

· THE MEIGS · COUNTY
Coophuntets will meet at 8 p.m.
Friday at the clubhouse on Snowball Hill lor a turkey dinner. Dues
will be coUected.
this week by Eastern High Band.

FAMILY

WWD BlRil fEEDERS:
·
v....
aDloleo
-

MEIGS COUNTY COON HUNTERS Friday at 7 p.m. ·on Snow·
ball Hill. Thanksgiving dinner
will lie served and 1982 dues
collected.

' Warm Morning GAS HEATER
2-65,000BTU GAS HEATER
Warm Morning
·

ChillicotheNursing
VeteransHome,
Hospital,
the
Arcadia
a local
veteran, and a veteran's son during
the holidays.
Plans were made for the .annual
Christmas party to be held Dec. 8
with dinner at the Meigs Inn, 6 p.m.,
and a $3 gift exchange with games

SALISBURY - Book Fair at

f:IEAlH

.• . . _ ~y
oiLOOII~
.

REVIVAL now in progress at
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church through Nov. 15 at 7:30 p.m
nightly. Pastor Rev. Robert
Miller invites the public ·to atlend.

1-50,000 BTU

5

Valenzuela - and six third-place

u C.Oio

No.JIIbecrtpUonl by maU permitted In towN!

LayAway

BAKE SALE Friday from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. at Dale C. Warner
building. Spoll8ored by Forest
Run United Methodist Church.

'

SeaUnel on • 3, 1 or 11 month biU. Q:edftl
will be given carrier ueh molllh.
'

'140.00

CINCINNATI (AP) _: The Cin: cinnati Reds closest to the Cy Young
··voting - pitcher Tom Seaver, pitching coach Bill Fischer and
Manager John McNamara - all expected Seaver to get the award that
went to Fernando Vaienzuela.
"I really thought he'd win il. I

.t::

I

Sublcribenl not desiring 10 PlY tJae C!lrriel'
may remit in lldvance dirocllo' tllt.lloily

PILE LINED
FUR COLLARS

:Reds manager,_ pitching coach felt
Tom Seaver should have won award

'

SINGLBOOPY

R.IGHT JACKm

FIFI1I GRADE PARTICIPANTS·- SbRieni!J bl·tJM!IIflli'grade who
·participated from Meigs County Ia tbe recent punt, pass, and kick competition were, front, l·r, Cbrls Becker, first place, Sean Gibbs, second
place, and Matt Baker, tblnl place; back, Kenda Kloes, Todd Hood, Vincent Laudermfit, RoDDie PoweU, Chad Sloclalr and Mike Frush.

9ood-,. no Dolly

-. llleoortBI.,~,OIIio-.

MeKnighll79; Brtnda 11acgy 174.

318 Ill. 2nd·
Middleport, Ohio'·
GENUINE LEATHER

Athletic Boosten, were, front row, 1-r, Mike Bartnun, first place, Brent
Bissell, second place, and Marll Griffin, tblnl place; back, Jeff Acree,
Aaron Williams, Joey Snyder, Eddie Baer, Scott HaDDing, Donnie Nltz,
Jim WIIHams and Robbie Clonch. Absent were Steve CasseU aad David
Smllb. Trophies for aU winners were dooated by Vaughan's Canllaal and
Powell's Soper Valu.
·

A THANKSGIVING can·
· dleUght sel'liice with communion
will be held Friday night at the
Reedsville . United . Methodist
Church, 7 p.m. Local !alent will
pl'elellt special music for the service.

38

SHOP

SIXTH GRADE PARTICIPANTS- Slxtb grade stndenll oi.Melgs
County wbo participated Ia the recent puat, pass, and kick comP.,tltlon
held at Meigs Stadium Ia Middleport, on OcL 31, sponsored by Melp

Plans for the olleervance llf.
Education Week, Nov. lf&gt;-23, were
announced by Mn. Lula Hampton,
education chalnnan, at the Tuesday
meeting of the Lewis Manley
. American Legion AuxUlary 2113.
"Need a Lift" and other
educ;ational materials"will he placed
by the unit in the Middleport JDDior
.High
School,
nd the
Middlthe Metga High School,
a
eportUbrary, and appies wiU be presented to the teachers
"in the elementary school, where the .
theme · "American Education and
You - Partners in Our Chlldren's
Future" will be placed. The group
will also sponsor a spot radio announcement.
Mrs. Margaret Bowles presided at
the meeting held at the home of Mrs.
Helen Harper during which time
contributions were made to the

Friday

The Daily Sentinef

The Daily Sentinel-Page-s

Legion makes donations
for Education Week

Social
Calendar

rt

GlOUIIIer wW of.
ficiate. Tldleta IDIJ be parcbued
by
Carl R. llylell at •
Sam J011e1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Norfolk · gray w/gray leather interior, 6-way
power seats, 5.7 .liter V-6 diesel, ··p ower win·
dows, door locks, Caborlet roof, AM/FM stereo
w/40 channel C. B. and much, muc·h more.

LIST PRI(E '11,.160.00
THIS WEEK

ONLY
.

EXP

$700
~,.,...::

~·-

. '15,70000

OLDs-cAO.-CHEY., INC.
308 E; Main St.

Pomeroy, OH.

~PAT

HILL
FORD,
IN~.
See: Garland P1110111 • Pit Ill Qlr_. M..
~H.

992·2196 ·

,, . .

· MIDDLEPORT,

PHONE1 992-6614

·Mon.-Fri.
.1 a.in.-7 p.m.

t•oru.

38~]*

'

OUR LAST REMAININ-G 1981 CADILLAC

SIMMONs ·

..,-Of,,...,.
..,.._.,...,..

¥011~

UP-FRONT

· Saturday
9 a.m.-5 p.m.

Otl.

'

�Sentinel

Frida

November
Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio '

The Oail sen_t!nel-:-Page-7

In and around Meigs County
Final Big B·end
·. Minstrel planned
Twenty-fiv~

women going back to
: 28 years ago are registered to take
: part in the final musical of the Big
· Bend Minstrel Association oo be held
at8:10 p.m. on Nov. 211 at the Meigs
·Bigh School.
The 25 women will be representing
· the many dancing chorus Jines over
: the 211 years of the show's· existence
: and will appear in an alwnni number. Joe Struble, traditional master
of ceremonies of the association

shows, will introduce the alumni
: members who wlll be greeled by
; April Chasteen Smith and Lila
: TeJTell Mitch, also members of the
: dancil)g lines a number of years ago.
Mrs. Smitli8jfd Mrs. Mitch have
daughters, Shari Mitch and Paige
Smith Cleek, who will be among the
ii.lumni representatives to be in. · troduced.
: Among the 25 women will be at
: least one repesentative, Mary Lon: don Guinther, who goes back to the
first production and there will be

could mean something ·
very special in the lives
of those you love ...

several sisters amoog the representatives. They are Sonja Ohlinger,
Sandy Ianerelli and Susan Baer,
daughter of Mr' and Mrs. David
Ohlinger, Middleport ;
Debi
Keebaugh Buck and tonya
Keebaugh Davis, daughters of Mr.
and Mrs. Marvin Keebaugh, and
Ronda Hudson Hannahs and Paulette Hudson HaiTison, daughters of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hudson. Donna
Reibel Shato, Gallipolis, who was
mascot of the Big Bend shows for a
number of years, will be a part of the
alumni group.
Also included in the alwnni num.ber will be Mary Bradbury O'Brien,
Maida Roush Long, Betty Jean Hobstetter Krawsczyn, Susan Wright
Bailey, Jane Sisson, Jan Alkire Bill,
Cathy Werry Price, Sandi Hamilton,
Susie Soulsby Abbott, Brenda Taylor
Hill, Lillie Imboden Kennedy,
Stephanie Rought Barnett, Becky
Nease Anderson and Coleen Wilson
Ohlinger ofDuncan Falls. ·

Cantata to be
will be presentOd Susnday night at
the Middleport First Baptist Churcb
under the direction of Mrs. June
K.loes.
The musical by John W. Peterson
and Don Wyrtzen is in three sec·
tions, the first relating to
" Patriotism for America," relating
to love for American and recounting
some of its history; the second,
' 'Praise lor America,'' a musical
tribute to America.and its flag; and
the third, "Prayer for America,•• a .
plea for the future of America.
Jayne Hoeflich is the naJTator.
Soloists are Craig Darst, Jayne
Hoeflich. Tom Darst, Cathy Riggs,

Remember Calvary

There Is one thing

I'd like to see
More love betw~Wn brdhren
Who remember Calvary,

'

How Jeslllllaiddown
"t!ry own lite
Because He loved 11!! ,
Wantt.'tl to .'lave us from .!ltrlft!.
HI~

Remember He was
God's only begotten Son

He died for our sins
Yes, He really care~
And He Hsteru~ earfl\!lltly
To all Of our prayers.
Ri!rncmber C11.lvary
Whatever you do
And Hill preclou.slovc
Will come unto you.

Barbara James, a servant of GOd.

Astrograph
November 14, 1981
Knowledge you ' ve gained
academically and from paste&gt;:perience will be put to new and
prof i table uses this coming year.
Success in your chOsen field is
likely, with advancement oc-

curring before your next birth·
day .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov . 22) As
always, honesty Is the best
policy . Keep this in mind today so
that you will tell it like it is rather
than like what someone hopes to
hear.
SAGITTARIUS CNov. 2l·Dec.
21) There won ' t be any question
in your mind as to what is the

correct thing to do, vet where a
loved one is concerned you may
yield to his or her impractical
wishes.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19)

Don' t let pride stand in the way of
your ac c epting w ise counsel from
friends who are only too will ing to
heip. Your only enemy could be
yourself .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191
Your ideas are so good today that
others can't help take note of
them . Be wary of one, however,
who'cf like to enlist you for a
selfish cause .

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 201
You ' re in a friendly and curious
mood today and enjoy m ingl ing
with all types of people . It' s best
· to select a companion who
doesn 1 t expect your und ivided attention .
ARIES (March 21-Aprill9) Try

to be as charming as you are
logical. Your Ideas will be
rece ived more readily if they are
presented with wit and grace.

Brogan-Warner

99

Rutland school holds
Halloween carnival

The Adult class
the Pomeroy
Church of Christ meeting recently at
the horne of Charles and Frances
Eskew voted to send a love gift to the
Kiamischi Mountain Mission.
The group also voted to give some
of their love offerings to the church
for general repairs. Plans were
made for the annual Christmas tjinner to be held at Shoney's on Dec. ·IO
with members to return to the home
of Betty Spencer for games, coffee
and dessert, and a gift exchange.
Betty Spencer presided at the
meeting opening with Psalms I31, a
reading, "Thank You God for Little

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Millin

H2·5130 Pomeroy

Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, 0. ·

ROYAl CROWN BOTTLING CO

Pomeroy

Mill

992 3542

St ..

M. l ll
IC c

9'12-6655

epoll, 0.

GEMINI

(Mav

21·June

20)

Your financial prospects look en·
. cour.3ging today where your ear·
ning powers are concerned, but
they may not be that promising
regarding investments or joint
ventures .
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Someone who is smitten with you,
but whom vou see merely as a
friend, could rece ive false e n couragement if · y·ou speak
without thilik ing.

Mill Work· ·
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

'.
J

LEO

(JUIV

2J·Aug.

22)

senior

Necessary little tasks should be
attendecf to as early in the day as
possible . Your interest Is likely to
switch to fun and games as the
day wanes.

VIRGO

(Aug.

23-Sepl.

· Main Sf ., Pomeroy . Sunday services at
; 10:30 a.m . Holy Communion on fhe firsf
~ SundQy of each IJIOnth, and combinad
, with morning prayer on the third Sun•
day. Morning prayer and sermon on all
other Sundays of the month. Church
Sdlool and nursery care provided . (offoe hour in the Parish Hall immediately
following the service .

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST. 212 W.
Main St. Neil Proudtoot, pastor , Bible
Khool, 9:30 a. m.; morning worship,
,10:30 a.m .; Youth meetings. 6:30p.m .:

~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
(!'t~ · La&amp;e.t

BURLINGTON

.

HELP US CELEBRATE OUR
ANNIVERSARY
NOV. 16-22

YOUR HEAT
UP THE

, G~AHAM

.CHIMNEY!
Get the MAGIC
HEAT and
•
Reclaim That Winter Warmth.
ONLY

f7991

BAUM TRUE VALUE

CHRISTIAN

UNITED

METHODIST .

9:30 a.m .. first and second
~ Sundays of eo&lt;:h month: third and fourth
Su'ndays each month, worship service at
7;30 p .m. Wednesday evenings at 7:30.
1
Proyer and Bible Study.

COME IN AND REGISTER
FOR PRIZES. NO.PURCHASE
NECESSARY.

" SEVENTH-DAY ADVEf'ITIST. M,lbe"y
Heights Road, Pomeroy. Pastor, Albert
Dittft; Sabboth School Superintendent,
MHo Whit•. Sabbath School, Saturday
afternoon at 2:00, with Worship Service
following ot3: 15.

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH-

lK OFF ANY PURCHASE

Sister Horrl•tt WarMr, Supt. Sunday
School, 9:30 a.m.: morning worship,
t0:-45 a.m .

POMEROY

FIRST

BAPTIST ,

Do•ld

Mann, mlnltter; W~lllam Snouffer , Sunday school supt. Sunday school, 9:30
o.rp.; morning worship 10:30 a.m.

Atl Kinds ol Crafts Available
Make It Yourself or .Let ust

FIRST

SOUTHERN

BAPTIST,

282

Mulberry Ave., Porneroy, Rev. William
R. Newman, r,stor ; Henhel McClure,
'Sunday schoo tuperintendent. Sunday
school , 9:30 o.m. ; morning worship,
'10:30: evening worship, 7:30 p.m.
1Midweek prayer service. 7:30p.m.
~ MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH. Oexhtt Ad., Rd. , Langsville, Rev. "" · A.
Hughes . Pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m.
S.rvit081 on Tuesdcly. Thursday and Sundav. 7:30p.m . ·

t

FAITH TABERNACLE .CHUllCH, Bailey
Run Road. Rev . Emmett Rowson. po1tor.
Handley Dunn. supt. Sunday school, '0
o.m. Sundoy evening servlc' 7:30: Bible
toaching, 7:30p.m. Thursday.

SCENIC ·HILLS
NURSING CENTER
536Buckridge Road

BIBU

~Preaching

Pd

DON'T SEND

DEXTER

·CH-URCH, Rav.Ralph Smith, pastor. Sun!Jav st:hool, 9:30 a.m. , Mrs. Worley
Fiancls, superintendent. PrBflchlng serVice• first &amp; third Sundays fOllowing Sunday School.

'Support mVoteiS in Lebanon Township.
I .

BAPTIST

CHRIST, ®OW. Main St .. 992-5235. Vocal
music. Sunday worship . 10 a.m.: Bible
study, II a.m. : warship, 6 p.m. Wadnesday Bible sludv. 1 p.m .

'

'

·SOUTHERN

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF

OLD

Newly Elected Trustee WIShes
to Give His ThankS For the

th~7;'~~~~Sept.

eYening worship, 7:30. Wednesday night
prayer rneet.in~ and Bible study, 7:30
p.m.
THE SALVATION ARMY, 115 BuftiH"nut
i .lwe., Pomeroy . Envoy and Mrs. Ray Win·
~1ing, officers In charge. Sundoy·hol!nen
meetlng, lOra.m.; Sunaay Sc;hool, 10:30
a.m. Sunday schooll.ader, YPSM, Eloise
Adams. 7:30 p.m., salvation mMting ,
Yorious speakers and music specials.
Thunday-10 a.m. to 2 p .m. Ladies
Home league, all women invited; 7:30
p.m . prayer meeting anc:l Bible study .
R.v. Noel Herman , teacher .
,CHAPEL , Route I, .Shode. Bible school, 7
p .m . Thursday; worship service. 8 p.m.

~a~ajt

EUGENE
G. LONG.
. .. .

Spend more time fulfilling your
arhbitions today and less time
talking about what you hope to
accomplish . Actions speak louder

THE

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E.

SAME HOURS·SAME LOCATION
Phone

Legion

OF

Clyde V. Henderson, pastor, Sun·
: day schoql, 9:30 a.m .. Glen McClung,
· : supt.; moming wonhip, 10:30 a.m .;
•even)rig service, 7:30: mid-wftk ser'.viCe, Wednesday, 7:30p.m .

.OF '5.00 OR MORE

221

23-0ct. 23) success in yoor encteavors is likely
today, but your gains may be
measured in inches rather than
yards. Be content as long as
you're mo\ling forward ,

American

CHURCH

~ Rev.

'

Awtiliary units of Drew Webater
Post 39 and was raised for Veterans
Day.

POMEROY

: NAZARENE: Corn•r Union and Mulberry,

THE POMEROY
PASTRY
SHOP
IS BEING
REOPENED

. the Naylor's Run playground
monument honoring four servicemen from the neighborhood who
died during World War II.
The flag was donated by the junior

TRINilv CHURCH , Rev. W. H. Perrin,

: pastor; 1Debbie Buck , Sunday school
supt. CWurch School, 9:15a.m. : worship
.' service/ 10:30' o.m. Choir reheorsal,
: ruesdoY. 7:30 p.m. und.r direction of
't Alice Nease.

MIDDLEPOfH CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION , Lawrence Manley.
pastor; Mrs. Russell Young, Sunday
Scl!o&lt;&gt;l 5vpl. s,nday School 9,30 a.m.
Evening worship, 7:30, Wednesday
prayer m"tlng, 7:30p.m.

..

MT.

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

614-446-7150

THE NEW CONCEPT IN NURSING
CARE
..
.

• Bright SUIRIIndinp with the decCIIabr blch
• Sem~Privlte •d Private Livin&amp; AccannnodatiOII$
• Spacious Facilities

.., ~,

MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO,

re-v.

RoclrleJames SotterUeld, pastor.
Morning worship, 9';45 a.m.; Sunday
teh9ol. 10:o45 o.m.; evening worsllip, 7.
Tuetdoy, 7:30 p.m., lod.. s prayer
' mMIIng; w.dnotday,7:30p.m. YPE .
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST. Corner
Sheth ond Palmer, the R.v. Mark McClung, 5vndoy ochool, 9:15 o .m. ; Rondv
Hayes. Sunday School, superintendent.
0an Rigp, Oil f. IUpf. Morning Wonhlp,
10: IS a.m. Youth meeting, "1:30 p.m.

I

'•

W.... oday, 'Including ww loll, _ ,

becwert, lunlor astronauts. ond junior

and -ldr high IYF; chol• pno&lt;lico, 8'30
p.m. w.tn..clay prayer mHtlng and II·
blooludv; WodnoidoV. 7:30p,m.
CHUIICH OF CHIII$T, Mlddloport, 51h
ond Main. lob Melton, mlnl1ter, seon
lalooman. auocl.,.. mlnlooet. llblo
;doool, 9:30 o. m.: -..lng -.hlp,
0::10 a. m.: .-.lng ..,.Ice, 7:00 P·"'·
:::::,,:,~~~and youlh a-P
=IPO~f CHURCH OF THE
~~. h¥. Jim .. _ . pat~:

.,

e Medicaid Appmuad

.

• Elclllant Nllllnc ·Stiff with 24 hour COIIIIII8

e F.. 11me Aclllilllklor and Satial Senice Directri
e Phyir:lllherlpJ Md Podilby Senices

8111 White.

odooel.
10:30

"*""''

5vndoy ochool oupl. lu'*Y
t:30 o .m.;
-.hlp,

o.m.;

Sunday

evongell1tlc

-~... 7:110 p.m . P~~~YW mHih'll,
Wedl ndm~. 1 p.f't.

L

,.

Pat

... .,..

461

~I • '" '

H~l

Ford, Inc.

s. Third, Middleport

.

I

PIZZA SHACK

\\ CENTER, ,INC.
~·~'f JohnPh.F . "2-2101
FUI!l, Mgr.
•

126 E : Main

~...

Why

-~

a

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Randall
Bailey , pastor . Sunday school , 10 a .m .;
Sunday worship, 11 o :m.: Children's
· church, 11 a.m .: Sunddy evening service, 7:30 p.m. : Wednesdov e'&gt;~ening
young ladies ouxiliarv, 6 p.m. Wednesday family worship , 7:00p .m.
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH . Near
long Bottom , Edsel Hart . postar . Sunday
school, 10 a . m.: Church, 7:30 p.m. :
prayer meeting . 7:30p.m . Thursday.

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAfTIST, Co'ner Ash and Plum: Ralph Butcher .
pastor. Saturday evening service, 7:30
p.m.; Sunday S&lt;:hool. 10 a.m. Sunday
Worship Service, II a ,m.; Bible Study
Wed. , 7:30 p.m., Noel Herrmann,
teacher,

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH

METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. RObert McGee, interim director

POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev. Robert Mc::Gee
POMEROY, Sunday S&lt;:hoal 9:15 a .m.
Worship servi&lt;:e 10:30 a.m. Choir
rehearsal , Wedn.,.day, 1 p.m. Rev.
Robert McGee, pas tor ,
·ENTERPRISE, Worship ~ a.m. Church
School 10 a .m. Rit:hard Rothemich.
pastor.
ROCK SPRINGS, Sunday St:hool 9:15 a.
m. Worship service, 10 a . m., Richa·rd
Rothemich, pastor.
FLATWOODS, Church School 10 a .m.
Worship 11 a.m ., Richard Rothemich,
pastor.

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
HEATH, Cht.ir&lt;:h School9:30 a.m. Worship 10:30 a.m . UMYF 6 p.m. Robert
Robinson. Pastor.
RUTLAND, Church School 9:30 a .m.
Worship 10:30 a.m. Robert Rid.r, pastor.
S~LEM
CENTER, Worship 9 a.m.
Church School 9:45 a.m . Robert Rider.
pastor.
' '
'-PEARL CHAPEl, Sunday School 9:30
a.m. W.o rship 7:30p.m .
SNOWVILLE, Sunday School. 9:30a .m.
Worship II :OOa.m .
SYRACUSE ClUSTER
· Rev. Stanley Merrified . Minister
FOREST RUN: Worshp 9 a .m. Church
Scl-loollO o. m.
MINERSVILLE, Chur&lt;:h School 9 a .m.
Worship 10 a .m.
ASBURY: Church · School 9:50 a .m.
Worship 11 a.m. Bible Study 7:30 p .m.
Thursday. UMWfist Tuesday.
I
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev. James Clark
Rev. Mark Flynn
Re". Florence Smith .
Re'&lt;l. Cor! Hicks
BETHANY, (Dor&lt;:os), Worship 9:00
a .m. Church School 10:00 a.m. Bible
study. 1st , 2nd, 3rd and 5th Tuesdays
7:15p.m.; youth fellowship, 2nd ond .4th
Tuesdays, 6:00 p·. m .
CARMEl and SUTTQN (Worship, Sunday School and most other events held
jointly .) Sunday School9:45 and Worship
11 :00 at Sut~on first and third Sundays
and at Carmel sec:ond ~nd fourth Sun·
days. Bible Study second, fourth and
fifth Thundays, 7:15p.m. Family Night
Fellowship Dinner third Thursday, 6:30
p.m.

APPLE GROVE, Sunday School 9:30
a.m. Worship 7:30p.m. ht and 3rd Sundays; Prayer meeting Wednesday 7:30
p.m. Fellowship supper tlr•t Saturday 6
p.m. UMW 2nd Tuesday 7:30p.m ,
EAST LETART, Church School 9 a.m .
Worship ser..,ice 10 a.m. Prayer meeting
7:30 p.m. Wedn•doy. UMW s.cond
Tuesday 7;30 p.m.
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday schooi
10o.m. ; worship ,'11 a.m. Choir proclice,

.

LET ART FALLS- Wort hlp service 9
a.m . Chur&lt;:h School10 a.m.
MORNING STAR, Wor•hlp 9:30 a.m.;

Church Schooll0:30 a.m .
MORSE CHAPEL, Chu.ch School 9,30
a .m. Wanhip 11 a.m.

PORTlAND, Sunday School 6'30 p.m.,
EvenlnQ

Wor1hlp,

7:30 p.m. ·You,.,

""llowthip, Wodnesdoy, 7:30p.m_
NORTHEAST CLUSTER .
Rev. Richard W. Thomas
Duane Syd.n1trlcker, Sr.

Sholdon Jahmon
,
John W. Dor.tglas
JOPPA, Wonhlp 9:o0 o.m. Churth

SchooiiO:OO a.m .
CHESTER,

Wor~hlp

~u~· h

life pu1

a prtmium on

"For A Real Auction
Call ·th~Real McCoy"
1.0~ "Mac" McCoy .
Rt. 1, Reedsville, Oh.

I've been tryin~ fm y~ ar~ 111 fit junk t't1od lntu
dh·t . When I ~u\:t.:ccd in ,omythiop
~t lmconc ~ay ~ the .\min 11w" tifl(~t'd in my fave1r .
Wh..:n l fail I 11:a,o·1 '''1'"'/tu the chi,~llcn~c .
Thb einpha.. b we plal'l! fin hula/14.'1! h ntll an
an: idcnl. Man h a~ ulway' tx-cn awun: that GuJ
l'!uih in1t1 hb cn:atitm 11rdcr anU Mattility. Witht~ t
'o \ ~·i ng thl.' whoil.' 111 y~tcr y. I rculuc that my
...piriluul j!rtlWih hu~ 1n keep pu~·c y, ith my phy~ 1cul
and in t l.'lkdu&lt;~ l Jc\·d~IJ'lllll.'n~ .
Wtln.hipping l.'al·h WI.'Ck mukc~ fur u Y.C I!·
haluncl.'t.l !ifl.' .

212 E. Main Street
992-3785; Pomeroy ...

s p.m.

doe ~

hllfUIH 'l'' .'

9 a.m., Church

School 10 o.m. Choi' Rohoonol 7 p.m ..
TIJundoyo.llb)o Sludy, ThuBdoyt.
· 7:30p.m.

LONG IOnOM, Sunday School ao9:30
a .m. E&gt;loftlng Wonlllp 01 7:30 p.m.
Thurodoy llblo Sludy, 7:30p.m.
IEEI)SYIUE: 5vndoy School 9:30 a.m.
Morning Worlhtp 10:30 a.m. Evening
Worshp .7:30 p.m. lible
Wednesday• ,!17:30 p.m.

Study

SUn!.lay
Cu ln,.~ian'

2:h, HI

Mnnday
Muuhcw
2h :2b -.1U

Tuc-.du ~

W~Jn~"'a~

t (tlrinlhiun ,

Murk
K:l -111

11 : .:! .1 -.\ ~

Coj,f"VV'TMIK•o... _"'9.tr..t:f
IOU.
I'IIIIJ"" ,l'lilOI!

I' Q.

"*'

C,.,_l_

BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Duane Warden , minister. Bible

doss, 9:30a.m.: morning worship, 10:30
NEW

h~~~~~~ ~~:~~~' ~;~~r'~~~~ -

I
27q- lM

1 -'~ · '1

~1~111

!I&lt;: "'Il\"'" tl'iotle(l 0,. t)'l .. ..,.,~.,

ALFRED, Sunday School at .9 :45 a.m.
Morning Worship at 11 a.m . Youth , 6:30
p.m . Sundays. Wednesdav Night P.rayer
Meeting, 7:30p.m .
ST . PAUL. (Tuppers Plains): Sunday
School 9:00 a .m. Morning Worship at
10:00 a .m. Bible Study. 7:30p.m . Tuesday .
SOUTH BETHEL (Sil..,er Ridge) : Sunday
School 9:00a.m . Morning Woship 10:00
a.m. Wednesday Bible Study, 7:30p.m.
KENO CHURCH OF CHRI~T, Oliver
Swain , Superintendent., Sunday !chool
9:30everyweek .
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, R'e\1 .
Keith Eblin , pastor. Sunday School. 9:30
a .m.: Leonard Gilmore, firM elder:
evSning ,.,_vice , 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
prayer meeting, 7:30p. m.
.

a.m.: eYening worship, 6:30
Wednesday Bible study, 6:30p.m.

ht~lwKrd

p.m.

STIVERSVILLE

COMMUNITY
Church , Sunday School service, 9:.. 5
a.m .;
Worship
servi&lt;:e ,
10;30;
EvanQelistic Ser\lice , 7:30p .m. Wednesday, Prayer meetmg, 7:30.
ZION CHURC~ _OF CHRIST, Pomeroy ·
Harrisonville Rd .: Robert Purtell , pastor ;
Bill McElroy, Supdoy school supt. Sunday
!Chool, 9:30a.m. ; worship service 10:30
a.m., Sunday worship service , 7:30p.m .
Monday and Tuesday evening services ,
7:30 e&lt;Jch evening ,
ST . JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
Grove. Th,e Rev . William Middlesworth,
Pastor . Church servi&lt;:es 9:3Q o.m. Sunday School! 0:30a.m.
· BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST , Jerry
Pingley, pastor . Sunday school , 9:30
a.m. ; morning worship, 10:30 o .m..
Wednesday evening service. 7:30.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev. Eorl Shuler,
pastor. Sutlday s&lt;:hool 9:30a.m. ; Church
service. 7 p.m.; youth meeting. 6
p.m. Tuesday Bible Study. 1 p.m .

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE.
Rev . Thomas H. Collier, pastor . Martha
Wolfe. Chairman of the Boord of Christian Life. Sunday School . 9:30a .m.: morning wor&amp;hip, 10:30: Sunday evening
wor5hip. 7:30 p .m . Prayer meeting.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m .
'
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don L. Walker,
Pastor. Robert Smith , Sunday school
supt.: Sunday school, 9:30a .m.; morning
worship, 10:40 o.m. ; Sunday evening
worship , 7:30; Wednesday evening Bible
study , 7:30.
D,-NVIllE WESLEYAN , Rev. R. D.
Brown. pastor. Sunday School , 9:30
a .m.: morning worship 10:45: youth s•rvice. 6:.45 p.m .: evening worship, 7:30
p.m.; prayer and praise. Wednesdgy ,
7:30p.m.
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST , Rev. Mar·
Yin Markin , pastor : Steve little Sunday
school supt. Sunday school, 10 a.m. :
morning worship, 11 a .m. Sunday e'&gt;len -

985-3944

Education. Sunday S&lt;:hool. 9 :30 a. m.:
Morning Worship , 10:30 a . m. ; • Choir
Practke, Sundoy , 6:30 ~ . m.: Even ing
Wonhip, 7:30 p.m . Wednesday Prayer
and Bible Study, 7:30p .m.
DEXTER CHURCH Of CHRIST, Charl,.s
Russell, Sr ,, minister; Rick Macomber ,
supt. Sunday Jchool, 9:30a .m.; worship
service. 10:30a.m . Bible Study, Tuesdoy ,
7:30 P·"'·
.

''·

ap. Soc'"'

ing wonhip , ? :3o . Prayer meeting and
Bible study, Thursday, 7:30p.m.; youth
ser'Yi&lt;:e . 6 p.m . Sunday .

REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF IAnER DAY SAINTS ,

Portland ,Racine Road. William Roush ,
pastor. Phyllis Stobot1. Sunday School
Supt. Sunday Sthool , 9:30a .m.; Morn ing
, worship : 10:30 o.m.: Sunday evening
service 7 p.m ~ Wednesday evening
prayer ser\liCel, 7:30p.m.

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. R.... Ead Shule, ,

pastor. Worship servke, 9r30 a .m. Sunschool. 10:30 a.m . Bible Study and
CHRISTIAN FEL(OWSHIP CHURCH, 383 doy
prayer service Thunday, 7:30p.m.
N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport .Sunday School ,
CARLETON CHURCH, Kingsbury Road .
lO:OOo . m. Sun. • Tues. Ev8ning Services
Gary King, postOf'. Sunday school , 9:30
7:30 p.m . Friday Pr?yer Meeting 7:30
a.m., Ralph Carl , superintendent ; evenp.m
ing worship, 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting,
LIBERTY Chmtlon Church, 4 liberty
Wednesday, 7:30p.m. ·
Ave .. Pomeroy. Sunday Scl'looiiO a .m .;
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN, Tom
Wonhip 7:30. Wednesday Serylce, 7:3()
Richason
, pastor ; Wallace Damewood,
p .m.
,
Sunday Sct)ool Superintendent. Wonhip
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOO. Re• . R. E. service
at9 a.m. Bible SchooiiO a .m.
Robinso~, pastor. Sunday school. 9:30
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH, R!!v .
a .m..: worship serviee , 11 a .m.: evening '
Theron Durham, pastor. Sunday S&lt;:hool
service, 7:00; youth service , Wednesot 9:30 o.m.; Mornlng worship at 10:30
day, 7:00p.m.
o. m. Thursdayservicesat1:30p . m. '

LANGSVILLE

CHRISTii'IN

CHURCH ,

Robert E. Musser. pastor . Sunday school,
9:30a.m. : Paul Muner , supt .; morning
warship, 10:30: Sunday evening servi&lt;:e .
7:00: mid- witek service . Wednesday, 7
p.m.

SYRACUSE

CHURCH

OF

THE

fREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bold
-Knob, located on County Rood 31 . Rev.
Lowren&lt;:e Gluesencamp, pastor : Rev.
Roger Willfoassistont pcntor. Preaching
services, Sunday 7:30 p.m., prayer
meeting, Wel::tnesday, 7:30 p.m .. Gary
GriHith , leodeYouth groups, Sunday
eveing, 6:30 p.m. with Roger ond Violet
Willford os leaders. Communion servi&lt;:es first Sunday .ach month.
WHITE 'S CHAPEL. Coolville RD. Rev .
-ReV Oeeter ,.pastor. Sunday school 9:3Q
a .m. : worship service, 10:30 a . m, Bible
study and prayer se{vice , Wednesday ,
7:30' p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST. Eugene
Underwood. pastor : Herb Elliott , Sunday
scllool supt. Sunday school, 9:30 O.l"fl.;
morning worship and comunlon . 10:30
a.m .

NAZARENE, ReY , James B. Kittle , pastor:
Norman Presley, Sunday School
Superintendent. Sunday school 9:30
a .m.; morning worship, 10:45 a.m. ;
evangelistic ;ervice. 7 p.m . Prayer and
Praise Wednesday . 1 p.m. ; youth
me&amp;ting, 7 p.m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST,
Eldttn R. Bloke, pastor. Sunday SctlooiiO
a .m.; Robert Reed, supt .; Morning sermon , ll o .m. : ~undoy night services
Christian Endeavor, 7:30p.m .: Song ser•.
vice, B p.m.: Preaching 8:30 p.m.
Midweek Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH.
p .m.: Alvin Reed, lay leader.
Amos Tillis , pastor : Danny Tillis, Sunday
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST, Lotat~ at
School Supt. Sunday S&lt;:hool , 9 ~ 30 o.m.:
Rutland on New lima Rood , next to
followed by morning wonhlp. Sunday
Forest Acre Park : Rev. Ray Rouse,
evening service, 7:00 p.m. Prayer
pastor; Robert Musser, Sunday School
meeting, Wednesday, 7:00p .m.
..
.sup! . Sund~ys&lt;:hool. 10:30a.m. : wdr~hip
RUTLAND CHURCH OF
THE
7:30 p.m.81ble Study . Wednesday, 7:30
NAZARENE , Rev. Lloyd 0 . Grimm , Jr ..
p.m. ; Saturday night prayer ser\li&lt;:e, 7:30 pastor . Sunday school, 9;30 a .m .; war·
p .m.
ship service, 10:30 a.m. Broadcast live
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN. Roger ov-er WMPO; young people's service , 7
Watson. pastor: Mildred Ziegler, Sunday p.m. Evdngelistic service, 7:30 'p.m.
schoolsupt. Morning worship. 9:30a.m .;
Wednesday service, 7:30p .m.
Sunday school. 10:30 a .m.; evening
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. Corner of
vi&lt;:e, 7:30. ·
. Second and APostor Frank Lowther. SunMt'. UNION BAPTIST, Rev . Tom dey school. 9:.45 a . m.: worship service,
Dooley; Joe Sayre, Sunday School
II a.m. and 7:30 p.m . Weekly Bible
Superintenent . Sunday sct.ool, 9:45 Sfudy, Wednesday , 7:30p.m.
o .m.; &amp;\lenlng wor!lhlp, 7:30p.m . Prayer
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. Mille•
meeting, 7:30p.m. Wednesday .
St .. Mason, W. Va. Eugene L. Conger.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST, minister. Sunday Bible Study 10 a .m. :
Vincent C. Waters , Ill, minister; Hermon Worship II a.m. a_nd 7 p.m. Wednesday
.alack, superintendent. Sunday School
Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.
9:30 a .m.: evening service, 7 p.m .:
LIFE SCIENCE CHURCH - 12 North
Wednesday Bible Study. 7 p .m.
Third St ., Cheshire. Independent , funCHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE . dom•ntolservices. Sunday eyening 7:30
Rev. H&amp;rbertGrate, pastor. Fronk Rittle,
p.m. Postor'Rev. Dr. RobertPenons.
supt. Sunday School. 9:30' a.m . Worship
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOO, Dudding
service, 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Prayer Lo(le, Mason. W. Vo. Rev. Ronnie B.
meeting, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Rosfl. Pastor. Sunday School 9:.C5 a .m.;
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST Moming Wors~ip 11 ·a .m. Evening Ser·
CHURCH, Rev. Robert Miller. pastor;
vice 7!30 p.m . Wednesday Women 's
lloyd ~right , Oir~tor of Chrlatlon Ministries 9 a.m . (m . .fing and prayer .
Proyer and Bible Study 7 p.m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, The Rev. William

••r-

Campbell. paslo,, Sunday School, 9,30

Sermonette
Tbe .4 buodpnt Ilfe
Often when I visit with someone whose life or whose family has
been stru~k by tragedy, I am asked, "WHy did God do this to me?" or
"What have I done to cause God to punillh me In thl:l way?"
We all have these thoughts at Urnes; and certainly the news
media and insurance companies don't help when they call lbe
~rs of the world "acts of Gild."
When we need an answer to such a prassing question, the only
place to turn ._ to God's Word. In John, oo.pter IO verse 10, we find
these words, "The thief (or &amp;alan) COII)es only to ~I and klll and
destrOy; I (Jeaus) come that they may have life, 81111 have it abundantly."
'
.
''
Satan Is the destroyer, who reeks havoc upon an Ullllllpedinc
world; yet we call his acti of deatructlon acts of God. Ia 11 any wonder
lhatevBII auutlaN are confuled? Jesuecameto Bive,. the abundant
life 81111 anything that does not lead to that abundant Ufe Is not of God.
'There's an old saylnc, "Give· the dnll 1111 dui," 81111 that II
precilelf where 10 many of .os are falllnll. Don't Wlderestlmate the
powers wltb wblcb we as Christiana must tolltenoL - Sobmllted by
Rev. Robert L. Mc:Gee, pastor, Pomeroy.UnltedMethodiit Cbw'ch.

o.m.; Jome• Hughes. supt .. evening ser·
vice, ' 7:30 ~ . m. Wednesday everUng
prayer mnting, 7:30p.m. Youth prayer
M~lce eoch Tuesday.
· FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, letart , W.
Va., Rt. I, Mark Irwin, pa1tor. Worship
services, 9:30a.m. ; Sunday a&lt;:hool, II
a .m.; -~ening worship, 7:'30 p.m . Tuesday cottage prayer m"flng and Bible
study, 9:30 o.ln. Worsllip ' service,
W.dnesday, 7:30p.m.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, now located
on Pomerov Pike, County «ood 25, near
Flatwoods. Re¥": &amp;lockwood, pastor. Ser·
. ..,ices on Suncta, of 10:30 a.(n . and 7:30
p.m: with Sunday school, 9:30a.m. llble

sludv. Wodnnday, 7:30p.m .
INDEPENOENT· ' HPLINESS

~"" ,}1

~~:;I,,

Groceries.
General Merchandise .
Racine 949-2550

MiddleportPomeroy,O.

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Phone99N480

~ - ..

WAIO CROSS
SONS SlORE

SENnNEL

MEIGS COUNTY, Re\1. Wanda Joh,nson ,
direc:tor : Harold Johnson, dlredor of
education.
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN, Worship Service, 9 o.m. ; Church S&lt;:hool,
10:.30a. m .
MIDDLEPORT. Churc:h School. 9:00
a.m., Morning worship, 10:15.
SYRACU 'SE
FIRST
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN C~urch . Churcll School,
IO:f5o. m .: Worship, 11 :30a . m.

Thu'oday.

PomeroY

THE DAILY

Middleport, Ohio

0

Middleport

Phone 992-6304

8EN
fFRANKUN•

l

MARK VSTORE

Eat In or
Carry Out

RAil'S

•:

'

m

21'S . Second
Pomeroy

992'3325

010

MEIGS nRE

-

' 992-3971 '

Save our RC, RC-100, Nehi, Upper 10, Diet Rite
and Dad's Root Beer boHie caps for .ch.a rity. ,

Things", and prayer.
The secretary's report wa given

An American flag now flies over

and

PlANING MILL

510 N. 2nd

!

Pomeroy

F (M'merlv ,.,.,.,, couniY
S• "ing1 &amp; Lou

Helping with a haunted h011Be for .
the affair were Danny am! Sue
Robinson, John and Margaret Johnson, Bob and Julie Moodispaugh,
Chris Bowers, Jan Rife, ,Carolyn
Dailey, Scott .Johnson, Todd Johnson, Victor Painter, H.J. Grimm,
Douglas Behnke, · Deb~y Tillis,
Carolyn Nicholson, Judy Eblin, Danny Davis, and Bobby Spire.
Games were conducted by Pam
Pennington, El)en Rife, Melva
Eblin, Mary Ann Norman, Debbie
Ccffey, Brenda Vance, and Marjorie
Fetty.
Janet Miller and Mona Johnson
handled admissions, and Carolyn
Black and Nancy Van Meter, the
general store. In the sweet shop
were Jo Ann Hays and Vicki Fink.
Kitchen workers were Nellie Haggy,
Phyllis Clay, Donna Jenkins, Sharon
Black, Kay Frederick, Juanita Lambert, and John Miller.

Flag flies

~j

Dinlnd Savings· &amp;
Loan Co.

•'

"Children's Prayers for God", and
by LaDonna
Clark
who read
Olive
Smith gave
the treasurer's
report and a report on cards and
flowers sent to others.
Smith gave devotions using
Psalms 100 and a reading "Love Let·
ter from Jesus."
Next regular meeting of the class
will be on Feb. 4 with Ccnrad
Ohlinger !o have devotions.
Elizabeth Duffy had the closing
prayer and others attending were
Gertie Bass and Melvin Smith.

,.

• ~·

104 W. Main
Hl-2311 Pomeroy

L ST.

282 w. Miin

99l-'H96

'. P. J. PAULEY, AGENT_ ·"

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

.

and Christmas cards.
Wby not share
h~r s1oly.

Reverend. Robert Robinson, pastor of tbe Middleport Realb Ulllted
Melbodlsl Cburch, and bls wife, Joan; wiD .preseal a 'l'haob~Mn&amp;
musical-lospirslional program Suaday eveDiag al ·7:30 at lbe Porllaod
Uniled Methodist Church. Tbe program wW ioclnde soloo by Mn. RobiJt.
son, group sioglog led by tbe Rev. Mr. oblaloo, and other special acUvltles, one Involving lbe youlb of tbe church. Tbe service Is open to lbe
public •

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

. ~!~ . ·s

/ complete

Autamotih "
Service

TAURUS (April 20·May 20) In
commercial
dealings your
judgment is good, but you may
fail to heed your own Insights and
do something yoU know you
shouldn't.

EWS &amp; SONS .SOHIO

'

Adult Orclass meets

He .showed love tor atll
Dldn'llcave out one ...

..

selection mher
books, pictures,

Crystal · Anderson and . Ryan
Walker were selected Mister and
Miss Pumpkin at the Rutland PTO
halloween carnival held recently at ·
Mary Ann McClung and Sharon the schooL They were presented
eight-track tapes.
Hawley.
,
Other participants recelV!ng
In the choir are Beulah White,
Nora Mills, Mary Ann McClung, Burger Cbef coupons were Sheryl
Sharon Hawley, Janice Gibbs, Thoma, first grade; Frank Mounts,
Alwilda Werner, Nadine Barton. second grade; Amber Eblin and ·
Nancy Anderson, Carolyn Davis, John Will, third; Bobbie Blessing
Phyllis Davis. Lynn Kloes, Cindy and Keith Adkins, fourth grade;
Parker, and Joy Hudson, sopranos ; Vickie Priddy and Jerry Cleland, fif.
Nola .Swisher, Cathy Riggs, Donna th grade; and Missy Clay and Sam
Grueser, Dreama Hudsons and Rife, sixth grade.
Carolyn Nicholson had charge of
Jayne Hoeflich, altos; Robert'
the.
costume judging with Linda
Parker, Dan White and Roger CarLowther
as the judge. She awarded
son, bass; andDan Riggs, Manning
prizes
to
Tony Pennington, Marcia
Kloes, Tom Darst, and Craig Darst,
Robinson,
Angela Larkins, Lee'a
tenors. John Werner handles the
Johnson,
Shelley
Black, Chad Carsound for the cantata.
son:
Prizes
were
donated
by Valley
The public is invited to attend.
Lumber, Miller Brothers, and Jim
Rickman.

·Poet's Corner

'

' We have a good

performed Sun.day
The cantata, "I Love America"

This Message and Church Directory Sponsored By The Interested Blulinesses Listed On This Page.

CHURCH.

INC. - Pearl St., Middleport Re\1,
, O'Dell Manley, pastor; Sunday schoot.
9:31) a.m.; Morning worship 10:30 a .m.;
eYenlng wonhlp, ~:30 p.m. Tuesday,
1!1:30 p.m. Women's prayer m"ting;
Pravet and pralle Hrwlca, Wednesday,

7:30p.m.
RUTLAND APQJTOLIC CHUIICH OF
JESUS CHIIIIT. Eldlr- MillO&lt; . llb'oludy, Wodltooday, 7:30 p.m.: Sunday
~1. 10 a.m. 5vnday night MtVi&lt;o.
7:10p.m.
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOI.INiiSS -.oanvllt. _..., fllot Floldt, patio"
~ Eblin, Jr .. SuOclar Scmol 5vpl.
Sunday School9:30 a. m.: -..lnv Warlhlp 11 o. m.; Sunday evening service,

7:30 .m.;_Proy8f' MMting, Thursday, 7:30
. p.m.

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD 'h.lot P&amp;ntecostal. Rev. George Oiler ,
pester. Worship s~r\lice .Sunday , 9:45
c.m.: Sundoy ' s&lt;:hool. 11 c.m.; worst-Vp
servi&lt;:e. 7:30 p.m. Thursday prayer
meeting, 7 :30p.m.
·
MT. HERMON United Brethren in
Christ Church. Rev- . Rober• Sanders .
pastor; Don Will , loy leader . Locoied in
Texas Community off CR 82 . Sunday
school. 9:30a .m.; Morning worship ser·
vil=e , 10:45 a .m .: evening preaching ser vice second and fourth Sundays , 7:30
p.m.: Christian Endeavor , first and third
Sundays . 7:30 p.m. Wednesday pra.,er
meeting and Bible study , 7:30p.m .
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, 37319 Stale
Route 124 (One mile east of Rutland) :
Sunday. Bible lecture 9:30 a . m.; Watchtower study, 10t20 a . m.; Tuesday , ~i ·
ble · study . 7:30 p .m. : .Thursday .
Theocratic School. 7:30 p.m .: Service
Meeting , 8:20p.m .
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Church Solem St ., RutiOnd. Donald Korr , Sr:
pastor ; Bud Stewart, superintendent,
Sunday School , 10 a .m.; evening worship, 7:30p.m . Wednesday evening ser"ice, 7:30p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD of PrOphe&lt;:y , located
on theO . J . White Rood otl highway 1~.
Sunday School 10 a .m. Superintendent
Jolln Loveday . First Wednesday night at
month CPMA services. second Wttdnesdoy WMB meeting , third through fifth
youth servicfl. George Croyle, pastor , •
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl - 570 Gron1
St .. Middleport : Sunday School, 10 o . m .:
morning worship, 11 a. m. e\lening wor·
ship, 7 p. m. Wednesday evening Bible
study and prayer meeting", 1 p. m . Affiliated with Southern Baptist Con\lention.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRISTRicky Gilbert, pastor: Steve Pickens ,
superintendent. Sunday School 9:30 a .
m.: Church Services , 1D:30a .m.
·
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER
George's Creek Road . Rev. C. J. Lemley ,
pas tor: John Fellure. superintendent .
Church school. 9:30a .m.; morning worship , 10:30,: evening serYice, 7 p.m . Bible
Study Thurs. , 1 p.m. Classes for all ages.
Nur5ery provided for worship services.
ST. PAUL lUTHERAN CHURCH , Corner
of Sycamore and Second Sts .. Pomeroy;
The Rev . William Middlesworth . Pastor.
Sunday School ot 9:.45 a.m . and Churcl'l
·
Services II a.m .
SACRED HEART , Rev . Father Poul D.
Welton, pastor. PI-lone 992-2825. Saturday evening Mqss , 7:30; Sunday Mass, 8
ond 10 o .m .: Confession , Saturday.
7-7:30 p.m
VICTORY BAPTIST - S25 N. 2nd St.;
Middleport . James E. Keesee. pastor.
Sunday morning worship, 10 a.m .: even·
ing ser'.lice . ] ;' Wednesday evening war~
ship. 1 p.m .; Visitation . Thursday . 6:30
p.m.
TRINITY Christian .Lssembly, Coolville
~ Gilbert Spencer, pastor . Sundov
school. 9:30a .m.: morning worship, II
a .m . Sunday even ing ser vice, 7:30p .m.·
midweek prayer service Wednesday ~
7:30p .m,
.
,
• MOUNT Olive Community Church'
Lawrence Bush, pCistor: Ma~~: Folmer, Sr:
Superintendent . Sunday School ond mar·
ning worship, 9:30a.m. Sunday evening
service, 7 p.m. ; Youth meeting ond Bible
,tudy, Wednesday, 7 p.m .
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy byposs. Rev . Robert Smith , Sr.,
pastor ; Rev. James Cundiff. assistant
pastor . Sunday School, 9 :30a.m.: morn•
in~ worship , 10:30 a . ~ -; evening war;
sh1p , 7 :30 . Women s Fellowship,
Tuesdays , 10 a . m.: W&amp;dnesday night
prayer service , 7:30p.m .
FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason , meet
at United Steel Workers Un ion Hall,
Railroad Street . Mason . Pastor , Or.
James DeBruhl. Morning worsh ip 9:3Q
a .m. , Sund9y School10:30o.m. Evening
Servi&lt;:e, 7 p .m . Prayer meeting WednesJ
day , 7:30 p . m. Mid-Week Bible Study:
•
Thursday , 7 p .m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST ;.;_ Rev .. Nyle
Borden, pastor , Cornelius Bunch
superintendent. Sunday school. 9:30
a.m .; se&lt;:ond and fourth Sundays worl
'
ship service of 2:30p.m .
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth an~
Main St .. ~iddleport . Rev . Calvin Min!
nls, pcstor. Mrs. Elvin Bumgardner:
supt. Sunday school. 9:30a.m.: worship
service, 10:4So.m.
•
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTISf
CHURCH, Roote 1, Shade . Pastor Don
Bklck. AHiliated with Southern Baptist 1
Convention. S~ndoy school, 1:30 p . m .~ :
Sunday wonh1p, 2:30 p.m. Thursdo'll-'
evening Bible study , 7 p.m.
...
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY. Rot:lne"'
Route 124, William Hoback, pastor . Sun ~
day school , 10 a .m. ; Sunday evening ser•'
v!ce , 6:30 p.m. Wednesday eening ter::
VICe, 1,
C,.,RPENTER BAPTIST . Rev . Freeland ~
Norris, pastor. Don Cheadle Supt Sun- '
day School, 9 :30a .m. Mornl~g Wo~ship 1
10:30 a.m. Prayer S•rvlce, ahernat~l
Sundays.
~

· MIDDLEPORT

PENTECOSTAL .

T"o',C

Ave., the Rev. Cklrk Baker, pastor. Carl•'
NoHingham . Sunday School Supt . Sun·"',
doy School 10 a . m. - classes for all~ .
ages: Evening se,.,kes, 6:00. Wed· •
nHday Study, 7:30p .m. Youth servlc8s . ;
7:30p.m. Friday .
.. ·,

ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128 Mill So ..~:
Mldd&amp;epott. Pastor It Brother Chuck •,
McPher~an . Sunday School at 10 0 m : ·
S.rvlc" Sunday e\lenlng at 7 p .m. ·and\
Wednesday at 7 p .m .

'

l

•

�Friday, November 13, 1981

Portland drop~. first tilt

.

~1, with~ mmutes remalnlng
'i n the third period before the Clip.
pers began their comeback.
Tratling 93-91 at the start Of the
fourth quarter, the Clippers reeled
Off the first six points Of the period tp
build a 97·93 lead, and they never
trailedagain.
.
•
Brooks alao had 11 rebounds fo'r
the Clippers, and reserve centef
Jerome Whitehead hauled in li
rebOunds.
;
Portland wBB led by Calvin Nail,
who. scored 33 points and pullejl
down 14 rebounds. Mychal TboJit
pson had 21 pciints and 13 reboundS
for the Blazers and also blocked
shots. Kelvin Ransey added 20 polntO
for Portland.
:
"

ByTbeAssodatedPret!o
said San Diego's Paul Silas. "The
The Portland Trail Blazers have game was kinda special beeause we
been playing the best ball In the
were down after losing Ill Utah
Natlon81 Basketball Association so
Tuesday night. We have to be
far this lleaSon.
aggressive. (Michael) Brooks gave
Until Thursday night, that is.
us a good utt. (Brian) Taylor ran the
"We stopped Ol!r o~fens1~e
show perfectly (13 asaiats). When we
.ex~tlon and permitted too many _ ,weredownljusttoldtheguys,now's
second shots. The defense was too • the time to pick it up. I told them we
pennlssive and the off!!nse too
could roll over and play dead or we
lrs,gmented," said Porlland Coach could come back and be men. They
Jack Ramsay after a 122-115 loss to
responded."
·
the San Diego Clippers,
In other NBA actlon, it was
· The defeat was the first this Phoenix 95, Indiana 93; Washington
seasorl'!or the Trail Blazers, who
95, Atlanta 117; and Detroit 130,
had won seven straight games, and
Cleveland 99.
marked the~ of the last unheaten
Michael Brooks scored 17 of his 211
record In the NBA.
points in the second half to trigger a
"We really hung in there, even
comeback for the Clippers. The
whert we were down, we didn't quit,"
Blazers led by as many BB 14 points,
READY FOR FIGHT- World Boxing Assocladoa
junior welterweight champion Aaron Pryor, lef~ of
Clocinoall, and undefeated challeager Dujuan JoJm.
son, right, ni Detroit, square off Saturday lo Cleveland

.'

(;fl::;.ified Page• ctJ~~er the
follurf&gt;inl( telephone exchanges, .•

:167-.~Cheshire

JII.,....,Vinton

245-Rto Grande
2s.-Guyan Dist.
64~Arabia D1st.

to wait for them to come to me,"
Pryor said Thursday. "Depending
on what happens In this fight, I'U
make my decision on whether to go

up a wetght class or down."
Jumor welterweight is san·
dwtched between the more popular
lightweight and jumor lightweight
divisions. Few b1g money fights
have been fought in the 14().pound
division.
"There hasn't been a marketable
ftghter in the junior welterweight
division. No one in my division has
been as popular as I have been,"
Pryor said.

1

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Wrller
Don Bucci, a veteran of coaching
Ohio football teams, admits he had
more of psychological edge when his
Youngstown Mooney team was cast
lD an underdog role in 1973.
The Cardinals are cast in a
favorite's· role in 1981 as The
Associated Press' Class M Ohio poU
titleholder and as a defending
playoff champion.
A field of 40 teams begins the
playoffs tomght w1th games in
Div1s10n II, III and V, mcluding

Mooney's Division II assignment
agaUlSt Steubenville at Austintown
F1tch.
·- •
"In 1973, we were ranked third
behind Warren Western Reserve,
the champion, and Cincinnati
Moeller in second. We played and
beat both t'o win the title. It's always
mce to be in that second or third

position rather than on top," BucCI
said.
Still, the veteran Mooney coach
does not believe his Cardinals will
tumble to overconfidence.
"This team has accepted the
pressure unbelievably. They don't

feel it. They don't let it get them
down," he said of his 9-0 team that
numbered among its victims Detroit
Brother Rice, Pittsburgh Penn Hills
and Cleveland St.lgnatius.
Meanwhile on Saturday night Cincinnati St.Xavier, 7·2-1, tnes to hall
top-ranked Moeller's bid for its sixth
playoff crown in the last seven
years. The two are rematched at
Kings Island Stadium. Moeller won
the regular season meeting 37-3.
Moeller Is one of four defending
champions among the 40 qualifiers.
Cleveland Benedictine, the Division
Ill wiMer last season, joins Mooney
in DiVISIOn II this time.
Garfield Heights Trinity, the
Division N wiMer m 1980, did not
makethis year's playoff while Tiffin
Calvert repeated in Division V.
Waynesville, the AP's Class A poll
king, also qualified for lbe playoffs.
The 19-0 power from Warren County
will face Maria Stein Marion, 11-4).1,
in Division V at Dayton Wayne
Friday night.
Here are the rest of the playoff
pairings for Friday night:
Division I I - Benedictine
1~,
'
vs. Avon Lake, &amp;-1-11, at Parma's

.

Studley's com~ents
fire up Cleveland
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Bill Walsh
IS angry. Sam Rutigliano is miffed
that Walsh IS angry. And players for
the San Francisco 49ers and
Cleveland Browns are emotionally
charged by coaches' comments
about Sunday's game between the
two teams.
First came the comment from
Rutigliano in his ·weekly news conference that the .49ers defense is
probably not as good as the one the
Browns faced against the Buffalo
Bills or Denver Broncos. He said the
, comment wasn't meant as criticism
but nonetheless true.
On the West Coast, San Francisco
defensive coordinator Chuck Studley
this week said the Browns don't have
great receivers and the offensive
line was "a bunch of guys named Joe
... not great personnel."
Somewhere, the 49ers heard that
Ruhgliano predicted a victory by the
, Browns, ~. over the 49ers, B-2.
Rutigliano s8.i.d CleveUind is .capable
of ~ling off six stra1ght Vlctones,

~~'!'""'g ~unday.

I ve sa1d that before every game

this y~~r, a_nd I've been wrong six
times, Rutighano sa1d.
In any case, Studley's comments
have served to fire up Browns'
players as much as RutigUano'uupposed victory predlctlon has lit a fire
under the 4Bers.
"Whal he (Stlldley) said bothers

all of 'us as ' a matter Of pride. He
shouldn't have said it because now
we all have something to prove; it

lik 1 ·
was eg vmg afire more oxygen,"

Cleveland offensive !lneman Cody
Reisen said.
"It's a ridiculous for him
(Studley) to say becall.je our offense
is one of the precedent-setters in the
entire NFL," Browns wide receiver
Reggie Rucker said. "But I'll think
more about it Sunday. It might give
all of us a little added incenUve."
In his telephone news conference
with Cleveland reporters Wednesday, Walsh, in his third year as
49ers coach, said this Is San Francisco's only game ot the year where
, the o~ coach has predicted
VI'ctory,
.
"As far BB we're concerned, we ,
have a team coming that has predlcted they'll ·beat 111, and also staled
that our defense wBB not up to stan' dards " Walsh said. "So now we've
got o~ backs to tile wall and we'll do
everything we can to prove we're a ,·
legitimate football team."
.
Rutjgllano meanwhile 1s putting
li!Ue laith ~ emot!on.lfJna !Iunday.
He said Of Studley: "I would be very
upset if one Of ID)' coecllel aaid
anything like that aboullll OIJIIIllln8
team ... botthal'4~bichldxlolaad ·

college ltuff, and 11
tbere ellber."

dollm't wort
?

'-

..

,

Byers Field, Columbus Whitehall,
1~, vs. Columbus Watterso, &amp;-1~.
battle at Gahanna and Dayton Roth,
IC).().O, vs. Trotwood Madison, 11).0.(),
in Dayton's Welcome Stadium.
Division lli - Chagrin Falls Ken·
ston, 1~, vs. Akron .St. Vincent·
St.Mary, &amp;-1~, at Kent Roosevelt,
Elyna Catholic, 11-1).2, vs. Bellevue,
&amp;-1-11, at Loram's Daniels Field,
Washington Court House, &amp;-1-11, vs.
Zanesville West Muskingum, 1~.
at Lancaster and Hamilton Badin, g.
loll, vs. Cincinnati Deer Park, I~.
at Middletown .
Division V- Mogadore, 7-3-ll, vs.
Ashtabula St.John, ·a.u, at Solon
New Washington Buckeye Central:
1~, vs. Tiffin Calvert, &amp;-1-11, at Tlf·
fm Columbtan and Crooksville 7·:HI,
vs. Newark Catholic, &amp;-1-11, at
ZanesVIlle.
Saturday nir.ht's remaining
playoff games:
Division I - Mentor, ~1. vs.
Cleveland St.Joseph, 1~ at
Euclid, Columbus Eastmoor 1~
•
•
vs, host Upper Arlington, 1~, and
Parma Nonnandy, &amp;-1~, vs. Canton
McKinley, 10-0-0, in Canton's
Fawcett Stadium.
Dtvision IY- Burton Berkshire, g.
1.0, vs. Rootstown, 1().().1), in
Warren's Mollenkop( Stadium, Tontogany Otsego, &amp;-loll, vs. Rossford, 7·
2-1, at Maumee, Nelsonville-York,
1~, vs. Coal Grove, B-2-11, at Ironton and Wheelersburg, B-2-11, vs.
Bellbrook, 9·1-11, m Welcome
Stadium.

Misc. Merchandice

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop
FALL CARPn SALE

lANDMARK

GET READY FOR WINTER
3 ROUS

Curb Inflatlon
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
II
Savell!
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

5"/6- Apple Grove
'173- Mason

TO PLACE AN AD CALL
In Gatlla county

'12~.\'d

'5"sq yd.

In Mason Counry

41

t4-AJYrtments tor REnt

U-FurniSI!td Room 1

4.._Sp.~ce for

Rem
4F-W•nted to Re•t
,..,_equlpmentfGr R!nl

I Auclion
l-Wanred ro Buy

U-Forl1111

eMERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
Jl-HelpWantld
12-Situo~Uon

2. _ _ _ _ __
3
4
· --""'----

5· --~--6· '- - - - - - - '
. 7. : - - - - - -

8. - - ' - - - - -

9· - - - - - 10. -~--~-

111. -----,12.
13.
l.t.
15.
16.

14-Buslneu Tr••nmv
Js-Schoolstnsfructlon
16--Radlo, TV,
I CBihJIIt
11- W•nted To Do

20. - - - - ' - - - 21: - -:-: - - - - . , 22. _ _ _ _....:,__
23.

2~. - - - , - - - - 25. - - - - - 26. - - - - - 27
28. _ _ _ __
29. _ _ _ _ __
30.
31. _ _ _ _ __

-.,..----------~-.,..---

32.
-_
--_
- ,_' 33. _
_

-----

34, - - . . . . . , - - - 35

~------,

W1nted

u-tnsur•nu

eFINANCIAL

~MIK MerCIIflnCIISI
h-Bull••na Suppflu
J6--Pets. lor hit

sr-Mus1C.allnstrument
SI--Frults. a v-velilbles
S,_For S.illleor Tflde

,

"'

Buy

eREAL ESTATE

11-Hom•storSIIo
J2-Meblie Homes

u - aualntu auua.nes

n-Loh a Ac:rt•"•

Real Estate wanted

u-•••a..n

Family man wants steady
work on farm with hous.e
tncluded, good worker with
referenc~s Call3BB·BB79.

TRAPPER we have a com·
ptete line of trapping sup·
plie!i Traps, dye, wax, and
lures. Spring Valley
Trading Co.• Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025
..For bulk delivery
of
gasoline, heating oil 8nd
cUesel fuel, call Landmark.
11'12·2181, Pomerov. Oh.

9 ~~~!!~!o~auY -=
WANT TO BUY Old fur
niture and Antiques ol all
kinds, call Kenne:th Swam,
256·1967 in the evenings,

GIL B. SR .
216 E. Second Street

'

• Phone
H614l·9t2·3325
NEW LISTING . - 6
room home on 12 acres
of land on State Rf . .
Bath, city water,

NO hunting &amp; trespassing
on Bright McCausland
Farm operated by Woolhan
Farms.

2 Locations
J22·N. Sec. Ave.

Middleport

No Hunt1ng or Trespassing

&amp; 10788 u.s. 3~
Jackson, OH.

on kenneth watson farm,

t~========:;-lr========::t==;;;;::;==~
D&amp;D
HARRISON

without wrtften per
mtss1on. Kenneth (Butch)
Watson

outbuilding
natural
gas heat
In and
Racige
one 1 . 11,....--~-----.
stolen Property. Anr,·que
School District.
NEW LISTING - one
J kitchen
safe. Ant1que
level acre ideal for gar·
"YOUNG'S
dining room cabinet. Two
denlng.• Large garage
rocking chairs Other
42x3&lt;1 and a •2 bedroom
CARPENTER
items. Anyone knowing or
SERVICE"
seeing this furniture being
home with hot air fur
•noce, bathl ntce car
REPAIR WORK
hauled in the vicinity of
·
b
t
-"ddonsond
•Gas&amp; Electric
Flatrock,WVonOclober 10
pettng, asemen ' por
modell
or later, a ltberal reward is
ches located at Tuppers
re
ng
•Cutting
Plains Willsellontlme.
-!C:~ngonllgutter
•Brazing
offered.675·1302
GARAGE APT.- Nlce
_ Conc'retwark
• 20 Yrs. Exp.
Used Color TV Sets for
' car garage with apt.
_ Piumbmg and
Sale.
POSITIVI LV no hunting on
, over Has bath, furnace.
elactrlal work
Reasonable Rates '
NEW PHONE NO .
the old H C. Brown Farm
equipped kitchena and
(Free Elllmotos)
866South Thtrd
opposite Ractne locks
enclosed porch. Want
V. C. YOUNG 111
Middleport, Ohio
'V
Letart, WV Signed 6111 Me·
only $17,500.
276 Sycamore St.
Daniel.
"
992 62150, m.7314
3 LEVEL ACRES - Of
,..,.,., Oh;o
PH. 992·5663
Middleport,Ohto
good truck land. 4
11 6 1 mo
9 21 -tfc
Children's GymnastiCS and
bedroom country home, 1.1~~--...,.......,.-,...,.....,.~
Lad1e's Exercise, Wed
hot water furnace, nice
a y evening in Pt.
blrcfl kitchen, wood· rL . - - - - - - - - - - + - - - - , - - - - - - t - , - , - . . . . , . - - - - - - l n e s d
Pleasant.
Instructor:
· burner. Iaroe woodshed
Helen Zinn. 4:30 to 7:30.
located on 338.
Keep Thl• Ad for
Call446-8074 or 446-70-14.
18 ACRES - on Rt. 7
Future Reference
near Chester. Can be
NO hunting or trespassing
divided into l9:ts. Trailer
Fred Johnson Dale
or building. !Ifso an old 7
Casto Farm ·Leased by
AND
room house and a 12xS2
Leroy Roush.
two bedroom trailer. All
And Home Maintenance
Call Ken Young
• for $32.000
•Roofing of all types
For Fost Service
' WE WILL T,.,KE OAR&amp;
•Siding
ATTE1NTION
Kau~er
ALSO
985-3561
; oF YOUR REAL
•Remodeling
Aluminum employees laid
•ESTATE •SELLING. 1 •Free estimates
off or facing laY off. Hear
PARTS AND SERVJCE
"Interior Remodeling''
' CALL 992-3176, HELEN
•20 Yrs. ex:perlence
ALL MAKES
What our company has to
FREE
ESTIMATES
&amp; GORDON TEAFORO
•Wa1hera
No re location
Phone 992-2771
•Dryers
AND SUE MURPHY.
Come to Mason
or99H093 ·
•Ranges
Loumcv Public Library, Pt
•Disposals
Huu\·iny
Pleasant, Monday Evening
Ph. 949-2160 or 949-2"'2
' •Dishwashers
10·28· 1 mo.
November 16th. at 7:00
7·Hic
•Hot WQter Tanka
9-5-tfc
He, 1clquarters
p.m. for free presen·
tation.No obligatton. Ask
;~~~~~~~~~~ ~----------1----------+----------tfor E.A.C Inc . meeting.

WElDING SHOP

1V SERVICE
NOW

OPEN

992 "259

WILSON

·BUILDERS

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

;

ALLSTEEL

COMPLETE

Farm Buildings·

SERVICE
From the smallest
Hu,ter Core lo the
Llrtlll Radlotor.

RADIATOR

RadlatDr Specialist
NATHAN I fOGS
35 Yrs. Experience

Utility Bulldinas
sizes from 4x6 to f2x40

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl. 3, BOx 54
RICIRI, Oh.
Ph. 614-843·2591

Pctmeroy, Oh.

Ph. 992-2174

5·7·1tc

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
•
•
•
e

Baclihoe
Excavating
5ep 11 c 5 ys1ems
Water, Sewer &amp;
Gas Lines .
eDumpTruck
Licensed &amp; Bonded

Ph. 992·7201

TRI ·Chem get together.
Public Welcome. Register
for classes now. November
30 at the Oh1o Valley Bank
meeting room on Rt 35.
10:00 a m .· 7:00 p m
Novem ber 16th Ch r ls II an
Union Fellowship Hall,
Main St. Pt. Pleasant, 10:00
a m .-8.00 p.m.
PLEASE return tree stand
(engraved Bill Crawford)
taken from Wiseman
property-no
questions
asked 304-675·1408.

--------

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

4

Giveaway

·-

1 - - - - , - , - - , - - - + - - - - - - - - - - t - - - - - : - - - - - - f A N Y PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
saJ.e may place an ad in thls
column. There will be no
charge to the advert1ser

C. R. MASH
CONSTRtJCnON
Custom k tchens and
1

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
US.Rt 50!nt

ap-

pi lances,
custom
bathrooms. remodeling.
plumbin, electnc, and'
healtng.
FREE
ESTIMATES

pH. 992·60 11
992·7656
0·20·Ifc

Guysv•Ue, Ohler
AulltoriJed J.tln Deere,
rtew HOH•nd, Buill Hot
Fa.-m Equlpmvnt

Dealer
FARM EQUIPMENT
PAI\TS &amp;. 51:RVICE
U:iEQ EQUIPMENT
1-No 1.00 Dnrsel Ford

Tnctorw1 C.ab
D~esel

J D Trector
M00·3J3 1 Row New Idea co~n
MOD " l t

Pte leer

S&amp;W

. GUNSMitHING

AND CUSTOMIZING
Re-Biue and Re-Finish
Restock, parta, etc.
, Order Guns 10%
Above Wholesale
STUART WAYNE
PULLINS
Call Aller 4 P.M.
992-7656
1H2·1 mo.

TWO IIG LOTS- And II • - - - - - - - - - '
· a one floor J)lan home
with 5 rooms. 2 1 - - - - - - - - - - + - - - - - : - - - - - - - + - - - - - - : ; : - - - - - j
bedrooma. and nice
blck porch. very low
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum .
UIIIIIY billS. $21,000
'
SIDING
HANDYMAN SPECIAL
- 3 room house and
pathl Some furniture .
For all of your wir·
Small lot. Minersville
area. S4,GOO.
ing needs.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

DRIVEWAY
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL

s ptJppies

lor good homes ·
Call 446·4933.
Female part Doberman,
part German Shepherd, 5
mo. old. Call 446·8233

B.

,- -

LOSiBnd Found- -

LOST between Bulaville
Rd. and Bunce Rd. Cow,
approx. 1.000 lbs. Black &amp;
grey . Call after 5 PM. 446·
1092.

76--AUIO Parts a
'

Monday 1 1G0on Saluraay
Tuitd•v """Friday 'IIIlO" M,
Hle•ay lltl,.lHJbiiCIIIon
Fr14!1~

SERVICES
11-H...,.elmJWovemenh
12-Phnnblng &amp; H.itlng
13-I.ICIIto'ltint
14-Eiettrlcll &amp;

RelrlgoriiiOI'I
15- 0Mtrill Heullnt
u-M" .•epalr
11-UIIMISflry

Rates and Otller Information '

Distnc~

-~-

~-~

~

LOCUST posts, 8 ft long .
4" small t1p-ch tP poles . 304·
675 6325 after 6 p, m

Wlll do baby s•ttmg 1n my
home anytime In M1d
dleport area 992·6349 \

HOUSE, on land contract,
near Pt. Pleasant, 304 675
5123.

13 _____ l!!s_!lr~~-c ~ - _

emp!ar mer=

11 - -- '"H;:e:;;lp:.w;:;a;;;n~l;;:e~d_ _
Fuller Brush Represen
tatille tn your area. Call
304 273·4559 or wrtte Rt. 1,
Sox 243, Ravenswood,
W Va . 26164
Expenenced man to do
body work and painting .
Apply 1n person at Hysell
Used Cars, Rutland, Ohio
Only serious workers need
apply.

Pinecrest Care Center
30H75-5941.

~

SANDY ANO BEAVER In·
stJrance co has offered
serv1ces for ftre tnsurance
coverage m Gallia County
for almost a ce ntury
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet md•vtdua 1. needs. Contact
Ne11 Ins. Agency, agent.
Phone 446 1694
AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE been can ·
celled?
Lost
your
operator's L1cense? Phone
992-2143

Profes'Ston~_,.

23

Services
P1ano tuntng and repa1r,
love your neighbor tune
your Piano. Bill Ward,
Wards Keyboar,d. 446-4372,
Gaii1PQI1S
HARPER Adult Care Cen·
ter·provid1ng the personal
ca re your elderly need m a
home like atmosphere.
Vacanc1es now availtble.
ca ll 304 675 1293

Real Estate
Homes for S.alc
4 bdr, split·
level , I1V1ng room &amp; dtnlng
room combmation, ea t in
kitchen, lg family rm , 2.
1/2 baths, located in Tara
Estates, Club house and
pool pnvtleges, 575,000
firm . Kyger Creek School
Otstr1ct Shown by appt
only call446 9403

Jl

BY OWNER

----------~

For sale by owner, 50 acres
and 3 bdr home. small
cash down, assume low tn
terest mortgage Call 256
9363
3 bdr , 2 bath, LR W1th
fireplace, family room with
wood burner, kitchen &amp;
dining room, ctty schools,
446-2003 before 1 00
2 or 3 bdr home, fully car
peted. large yard and garden, 3 ml from town Ca ll
446 0648 alters .
3 bedroom house, 2 acres, 2
baths, family room Full
basement, garage 949
2079

LAND
CONTRACT 2
bedroom, full basement,
workshop With a tta ched
shed, appro&gt;etmately 'h
acre All excellent con
dttion. S28,DOO Sl.OOO down
and 11 percent on unpatd
balance $275 a month In
Rae lne area 614-949·2249
Or rent-3 · bedroom fur
mshed home on Bud Chat·
tm Road on b1g leve l lot,
57627 11
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad
dit1on 3 bedroom, fa mily
room wtth fireplace , ce n
tral atr, basement. 304-675
1542
'
SANOHI LL Road, Pt .
Pleasant. 3 bedrooms, 11J'
baths, double garage.
Owner wtll fmance. lm..,
med1ate occupancy 304
675 5817
- ___,_
..._
THE Roush home at 25 15
Mt Vernon IS for sale call
thesonat614 927 5413.

___ ----

_

.3 bedroom older home, ap
prox . 4 acres. 10 m1tes from
town Phone 675 6597

OWNER ftn a ncmg New
cou nstru ction , one acre
long, 3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths, living room wtl't'\
f1replace
Attached
garage, payments lik e
rent N1ce low 1ntere5;t
property Phone 304 675 ·
3030 or 675 3431

32

ij ~~ }~h0cil5}tl'sfrUcffo_!l _

__

L~n

Columbus First Mortgage
Conipany FHA VA PI nan
c1ng Loan Rep Cookie
Krautfer 1304)675·3473

.

Buying Gold,
Silver,
LP
WANTED
Platinum, old coins, scrap I·C•vto·leclhno•li&lt;1g1st ASCP or
nngs &amp; stlverware. Da1ly equivalent needed tor a
quotes available Also large n'lUiflspecialty group
coins &amp; coin supplies for practice 1n Southeastern
sale
Sprtng Valley Oh10 wtfh two pathologists
Trading, Spring Valley 1n a CAP accred1ted labor
Plaza, 446-8025 or 446·8026
tory . Competitive salary,
excellent benefits Send
resume to Personn e l
BEDS· IRON, BRASS, old Department,
Holzer Cl1nic
furniture, gold, silver Ltd , P.O
Box 344,
dollars, wood Ice boxes, Gallipolis, Ohio45631
stone jars, antiques, etc.,
Complete
households. -·----·------- Write. M.D. Miller, Rt 4, GET VALUABLE" tra1n1ng
as a young business person
Pomeroy, Qh Or 992 7760
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a SenCHIP WOOD Poles max
tuiel route carrier Phone
dtameter 10" on largest us nght away and get on
end. $12 50 per ton Bundled the ettglbllity list at 992 ·
slab $10 50 per ton 2156 or '192·2157
Oeliverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
Rock Sprtngs Rd ,
--Pomeroy 992 ·2689
12 ·- S_!f~.!!~!'~ ~~!!~ ....
Bookkeeper or secretary
Gold, Stiver, sterling, posttion full or part time, 12
jewelry, rings, old coms &amp; yrs. experience, good loca l
currency Ed Burkett Bar· references. Call446-0183 or
ber Shop, Middleport. 992· 446 0871, Karen.
3476.
El1m Resthome Care for
NEED MONEY? I need hand1capped, aged, or bed
furn1ture . New, used or an· patient Temporary or
tiQue. Also bUYing glass, limited care Or cont1nuous
china, gold, silver, coins, home with us Equipped for
watches, chains, etc. Mar wheel chair 742·2266
tin's General Store, M1d
dlep-ort, Ohio 992 6370
Have room &amp; board fo r
elderly Reasonable rates
Raw furs, hides, scrap 992 6022
metals.
bAtteries,
radiators, gmseng, yellow Carpentry , paneling,
root. and merchandise cetltng ttle and floor t 11e
brot&lt;'ering Harper· Halste
ad Salvage Company, 300 992 2759
Eleventh Street. 675·5868 .
Also Flea Market open House c1ean1ng 1 day a
week on regular basts Call
daily
Open Monday
Sharon at9..t9 2160
Fnctav 1·5pm

LPN or RN for pr1vate duty
nursing for male pati,nt at

Mill This Coupon with Rtmitt1nce
The Dilly Stntlntl
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Qh. 45769
.

The 0 0

~

RN. local 100 bed ICF is
currently seeking a direc
tor of nursing Are you the
dedicated professional whc
Is qualified by· educatton
and experience, and whc
shar•s our committment to
high standards of patient
care? Your salary will
commensurate with your
experience and our benefit
packJge Is liberal. Scenic
Hills Nursing Center, Box
262, Bidwell, Ohio 45614. At·
tn: Kim Nye, Ad ·
mmistrator. We are an
Equal Opporruntty Em ·
player.

71-CIMPinl EqUIIMfitftt

Wont· Ad Advotllsing
Otodllnes

Mcintyre Park
IS now acceptmg
applications for part tim~
recreation leaders, tn ·
slructors, and pro~ram
CASH PAID for clean, late d1rector postttons The
Park Dtstr1&lt;: t is 1nterested
model used , cars Smith in
offering afterschool
Buick Pont1ac, GAllipolis,
programs for children as
Ohio Call 446·2282.
well as evenmg classes and
programs for adults If you
BUYING GOLD &amp; SILVER have any spec1al sktlls or
Paving cash for anything talents you would like to
stamped 10K, 14K, 18K and share or are interested tn a
dental gold . Class nngs, poss•ble part t1me pos1tton
wecld1ng nngs, Silver coins '" recreatton, stop in the
or anythtng stamped Park District office to p1ck
sterltng Clarks Jewelry up an application or ca ll
Store Gallipolis 446 2691 or 446·4612. ext 16 to have an
992-2054 In Pomeroy I
application sent to you.
- --- -- -- ·Junk cars with or Without The ~alllpolis Recreation
motors, and batteries. Call Department is currently
388 9303
taking applicat1ons for
basketball referees and
Terr1er house dog, per scorekeepers for the Rtnky
fer ably Carin or Yorkshire. Omk Basketball Program
Good with children, will- Apply bu Nov 25 at the Ctty
constder a poodle Call 614· Building, 518 Second Ave,
Gallipolis.
446 4336

ser lees
5 PUPPIES, mofher·full
blaooed Pit BulL 304-675·

74-MotorcycMs.
n-ICN~II &amp; M41tor'
I

Butcher's Shoppe Custom
butchering &amp; processing
Call 4&amp;6·28Sl. Gallipolis,
Oh

3._-~A~n!'nou~n"'c"e"m"'en"ls~­

I TRANSPORTATION
11- Autos forS•1e
72-Trucks lor Slle

Accnsorlts
77-Auto Re,.lr

Bookkeeper or secretary
po$1tion full or part time, 12
yrs. e)(perience-, good local
references. call -""6·0183 or
.w6·0871, Karen.

Apples, Honey and Sweet
Cider. Grimes, Romeo,
Gal., and Red . Dellclqus,
Staymen Winesap. 15.25
per IMI~hel and up. Cheaper
tn volume. Fitzpatrick Or·
" .. although whAt we are about chard, SR689. Pl'ione 614·
to rece1\'e Cost $4.53 more than 669·3785.
, the same thine lut week .. "

7»-Vans &amp; 4 w D.

lor Sale

U-Fumslorllltt

sitting, near
Foodland, any age, meal s.
snacks. toys. safe home.
references. Call 4-i6·71..,_,
$35weekly ,

2] _ _M~ey to

SERVICE

Sale
M.... Hav &amp; Gran'
U- Seed • Ferl•ll ,n r

ll-Profenlonl!l
Services '

TRAPS and TRAPPING
Gene Hines,
.Ohio. 61H.t8·
after 1 p.m

Mlu.ER E1ECTR

0 -L IYISfOCk

to Lo•n

Sunde' 2:11 P,M,

Jl- AnllqUH

.:~- wanted''

OpportfltllfY

]6-

5 1 -He&amp;~lehoh;jGOOdl
51-CB, TV, RICikl Equlpmtnt

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
,, ..... Firm EquiPniant

~t-Bus•nen

22- Meney

-Houl~hlf"Rent

42- Mob•l• Homu
lor Aani

7-Yirdhlt

I

. 675-Ull

OLDER l'h STORY
HOME With 4
bedrooms, family room,
Iaroe kitchen, living
room, and bath. Over iJ'.2
of yard with fruit
trees and a place for a
garden. $20,500.
MOBILE HOME AND
LOT- IN RUTLANDA 12x54 New Moon
Melro with 2 bedrooms,
detached one car
garage, 'I• acre nice lay
fng lot, and concrete'
paflo. $12,000.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
.
eANNOUNCEMENTS
eRENTALS

I - Public Slle

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

..

99Z·2156 ~

OWNER HAS REDUC·
ED THE PRICE RACINE AREA - A
real country home on
approx. 2 acres with .4
bedrooms, full base·
ment, carport, fully 10·
sulated, and forced air
gas heal. Now$39,000 .

PHONE 992-2156.

6-'Lost •nd FOund

( )Wanted
UForSale
&lt; }Announcement
( l For Rent

.

446-2342

Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Every Sun. starting
at 1 p,m . Factory choke
guns only.

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

Baby

Racine Vol. Fire Dept.
sponaon a shotvun &amp; rifle
matcft every Slit. night at
6:30 p.m. 11 lhelr building
at Bashan. Factory choke
12 guoge shotgun &amp; open
sight 22 rifles.

TOM HOSKINS .

WANT AD INFORMAnON

.&lt;41-Give•w•y
$-HIPPY Ads

These cash rates
Include dlscount

1n Meigs county

E. MaitiiW
POMEROY,O.
992-2259

1-c 1 rd of Tl\lnks
2-ln Memorl1m
J-AnniM.Incements

for· revenge

touclldowns.
'
The. botll Tigers, champions of the
Blue Dlvllion, will aUempt to
avenp a 11-G title iooa last year to
Baldwlo·Wallace. The Yellow
Jacteta, Red Dlvlalon tlt!ebolders,
a1ao bl8nked WittenberJ 7.0 Ill a nonconfereru!e tuneup thia faiL ' • ·
Blldwio-Wallaoe lost only one
game, 17·10 to Wi!ltminaler, Pa., in
nine' ltartl tlda MUOn while WlttenbelJ plllted I 7-1 overall record
Butlerhaa!fed the Tigers their
.mddefeatD-1,4.

1 Blue Frost
1 c;reek Bed

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

Tigers out

882- New Haven
895-Letart
937-Buflalo

Sizes

I
I
I
Name ___________________.,

Phon•----------

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

"From30x30''
SMALL

Write your own ad and order by mall with this
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundabl•.

Address;;..
· --------

procuted.

'

I

with Major Hoople 11

PAINTERS

Buy Now &amp; Save$2·$6 Per Y'ard ·
25 rolls carpel in stock to pic!&lt; from.
Regular backed, carpet installed free
with pad. Good selection Roll En~s Remnants $2.50 up.

--~

Violaters will be legally

ROOFING

Good selection of carpet thru the 30th of October.

. - .---..
·---------------------~I

.

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sporta Writer
Baldwin-Wallace lrtes to whip host
Wittenberg for a fifth straight time
Saturdlly in their Ohio Conference
football championship game, but
may have to do it without star quarterback Dave Heinemann.
HelnemaJ\n, the league's total of·
. tense leader, has back fl1ld knee injurta and sa.t out last week's 41-3
rout· Of non-conference C&amp;nWus.
Brian Moore, a~ 'replaced
hi'll and ran and p8l8ed for four

'1~"

PRIC'ED RIGHT.
~-

cash-n-Carry
1Green Tweed
1 Rust Tweed

yd. Installed

416·0294 .

OHIO VAU.EY

POMEROY
614·992·2181
For
Farm and
Home Delivery ol
Gas
Diesel
Healing Oil.

Co .. 't/· va.

Area Code 304
t7S- Pt. Pleasant

LAFF -A-DAY
, ..

3
Annountemtnts
SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair. parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one "'" mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call
NO
HUNTING
or
trespassing on any of my
property, day or night in
Cheshire Twp. Gallla Co.,
owned by J . Arthur Evans.

949-Racme

4!i8-L~n

y

..

":.:: : : ·.: ...

-

.

Ohio post-season playoffs
get und~rway this evenillg

'

343-Portland
247-Letart Falls

M~son

In a scbeduled .l5 round tidellllltcb. II fa Pryor'slblrd
delease ni lbe dtle slnee be woo II from Antonio Cervantes IDAugllBI19110.1AP Laserpholo).

:=-

.

742-Rutland

five

'
I
"You've got to go where the
is
20years
old,"
Pryor
said.
~=:;;:~~;;::::::-r:-::::======-r~=-=-=-=-~-:-r:....-..;.;;...;....;_:,......;.
money is," Pryor's manager, Buddy
Johnson, wliose receding hairline, I - - PUblic Notice
- __ ...___ - - - - LaRosa, said. That means either a
short-cropped hair and battle scars
____!'ubllc Notice
:· :_-::- l'!i.~~-NoticePublic Notice
heavier or lighter weight class.
ot more than 150 amateur and
1N THE
containing 3.65 acres, be
PUBLIC NOTICE
may submit comP.etlthit!
Since Pryor turned professional in
prOfessiOnal fights appears conCO~'t8/:/~fAS
thk~arE'R~0~t~ 1 ~EED ·
Census Bureau Form RS · bids at 10:00 o'clock A.M:
9
November 197&amp;, he has won 28 fights,
siderably older than his age, said he
MEIGS COUNTY ,
Vol. 217, Page 39, Meigs
F Survey · of Federal on the dale of sale. The
OHIO
County Deed Records.
Revenue Sharing Ex · guardian reserves H1e rloht
26 by knockout. Pryor predicts no respeels Pry or but still be lieves' he T T
1
You are required to an- penditures of the Village of to reject anv or all bids.
.
S A E OF OHIO AND
lh C
I .
'lhl
Syracuse. Ohio,
is
such thing over the young, but
•
canwtn.
COUNTY OF MEIGS swer e omp Blnt WI 11 ava1Jable for inspection at
Kenneth ,C. Welsh
heavily experienced Johnson.
"I don't think Aaron Pryor has BOARD OF HEALTH
twenty·etght days after the the Clerk's Office, Third
Gu&amp;rdlan of
Plaintiffs,
last
publication
of this st Syrac
Oh'
"We all saw what youth can do m f()ught anyone of my capabilities or
vs.
notice, namely, by not later
·•
use,
to,
from
Adr1enne
Frencti
. 1 I' h
A
than the 8th day 'of noon fo 4 P m . Monday
the (Renaldo) Snipes·(Larry)
te
t
my po n ta. m ere to take the M ~~f:riJa~~~LE, ET AL January, 1981 , or IUdgment through Fnday.
(11) 9, 10, 11,12, 13, 15, 6tc
Holmes fight last week. Du Juan is
title away from him," Johnson said.
Janice La~son
17, 607 by default w111 be rendered
young and he's strong," he said.
In· 17 pro fights, Johnson has 13
against you
Ill) 13, ltc
CL RK
Public Notice
Fred w. Crow, Ill.
-~
Johnson is about the only fighter
knockouts.
Meigs County
PROBATE COURT :
left mthe jumor welterweight class
Pryor, who was f~ated lD a bid
Prosecuftng Attorney
OF MEIGS COUNTY, .,
(11) 6, 13, 20, 27, (12) 4, 11,
who IS worth Pryor's tune. Since
OHIO
I
for the 1976 Olympics by eventual
6tc
PubliC NotiCe- ESTATE
OF
'
ROY
~ ---Pryor won the WBA Iitle from Angold medal
winner Howard Davis
.
DONALD
BETZING ,
toniO Cervantes wit~ a fourth-round
NOTICE OF
DECEASE
entered the professional ranks shor·
SALE
Case
No.
23570
knockout in August 1980, he has
tly after. But as America's gold
Offers w!ll be rPceived at
NOTICE OF
fought three limes, defending his
the off1ce of Bernard V.
APPOINTMENT
medal winners, including Leon and
Fultz,
11111:!
West
Second
OF FIDUCIARY
•
title twice. All three were knockouts, . Michael Spinks and Ray Leonard,
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio, unOn NovemberS, 1981, 11\
including the No.I challenger.
,
til
the
17th
day
of
Novemthe Meigs County Probat~
came home from Montreal, a nonber, 1981, at 10:00 o'clock Court, Case' No. 235701
Pryor sounded a bit like the fie·
Olympian boxer like Pryor had a
A M. for the sale of J;~art of Kevin G. Betz•ng, 61J
tiona! Apollo Creed in the movie
the Adrienne French real Osborne St., Pomeroy 1
hard time getting much attentiOn.
estate situated in Scipio Ohio was appo1nterl
"Rocky" when he assessed the unPryor kept pummeling opponents
Township, Mei9s County, E&gt;eecutor of the estate of
beaten Johnson's chances.
OhiC The port1on of real Roy
Donald
Betzing J
unlll he got a shot at the junior
estate beln9 offered for deceased, late of Pomeroy l
"He's blessed to he here. I'm not
welterweight title against Cer·
sale conststs of -ap· Oj'l10.
going to fight another contender who
vantes.
~
proximately 171 acres.
Robert E. Buck
(There ar~ no buildings on
Probate Judge!.
the land being offered for
Clerk
1
sale ) Interested parties (11) 13. 20, 27,Jtc

'

Me1gs Co. Area Code
614
1 992-MiddlePQrt
Pomeroy
98s- Chester

.614
446-G.illtpoi1S

Small investment, large
Pryor in final welterweight bout returns, ·Sentinel WlQlt Ads

CLEVELAND (AP) World
Boxing AssOCiation junior welterweight champion Aaron Pryor has
earned plenty of respect in his fiveyear pro career. His weight div1sion
has not, however.
That's why the Pryor says Satur·
day's bout agamst No. 2 ranked Du
Juan Johnson from Detroit will be
his last Junior welterweight fight.
"I want a title shot at Ray Leonard
or Alexis Arguello, and I'm not going

..

Gallia Co. Area Code

-~.:.:

Mob1fe Homes
for Sale

··---·---·e

RI · STATE MOBILE
PIANO &amp; music reading HUMt,&gt; . Galltpolts Year ·
classes. 7 years teaching
sa le, pnce reduced,expenence. 304·675·2440.
mobtl e homes CALL

i8-

_________
__··--wantedtODO
_.

Will do babysttflng 10 my
home. Garfield area Call
446·4813.
.·- - -· ---·--- - -TV service calfs. Call 992·
2034 Atso used color TV for
sale.
WILL do Hoi iday baking,
candy
making,
cake
decorating. Sarah Pearson,
call 304·675·5527 for
estimate.

fLL.to"N USED MOBILE
ES
KESSEL'S
IT Y
M 0 B LE~
SALES, 4 MI.
ST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
PHONE 446·3868
J

--

·~ - --·--'Kentuck tan , 2
lbe&gt;di&lt;&gt;oo~. 1 bath, good con ·r
new carpet, only
,.,,,.,. Call446 3547.
WILL do Odd jobs, general -- --------- ............__- ~
house maintenance Havelb\9~7,~1 r~,\~~~·0~ 12X65 two
e)(periencewithcarpentry,
m , ' air cond ..
plumbing, electrical, some
on rented lot . Ph. 1
appliance repatr. Call 304·
S:OO
67$·5981 or 675·3770. Ask for
steve. ·

aale·tecond

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

Vernon Ave.
--~

••

,

-~ ·-

�·, FrMiay. NovomiMr

·-

·- ~~~~~~~
«
KfT 'N' CARLVl.E,.
bv Lury Wright
(r-------------------,
~
es,
.
toveseat.
.....

41 - - H-ouse• lor Rent

lorSole

.. - -;;;;k, 3 bdr., mobtlt

, furnished, under
nned, patio, porch in
I'• l_uded. Call 388-8069 alter
•

Bi
...~

----

.......--

Very

nice mOdern two

bedroom

12x6S Skytine Acadmey, 3
bdr., exc. cond . Call 4A6·
8134

3 mob1le homes on one lot
..40 Custer St., M1c:ldleport
"4 992· 3318 or 614-m -2685
~Iter 3 p.m .

--1 bedroom furnished and

set up
1mmed1ate oc·
cupancy . $5,250. In Country
Mob1le Home Park . 992 ·
7479

~9ii ~ Oa~~~- ~- ;-·-;.s. -3

I

bedrooms
1972 Crown
Haven, 14 x 65 with 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
t Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms .
1 1972 tnvader 14 x 70, 3
' ' bedrooms 1972 Nashau, l4
x 60. 2 bedrooms. B 1/.,. S
Sales, Inc 2nd and Viand
~ Sts
Pt . F'leasant, WV .
( Phone 675--'424.

·-

- --

---~

--

Wt

Deposit. and

Available. 1 bedroom apt.
for rent. Contact Village
Manor Apts .• Middleport .
m -7787.

2 bedroom all electric ran·
ch style home. 1 mile from
Racine. References anc:l
deposit required . Available
Nov. 15. Call614-949·2849.

2 bedroom turn1shed apt .
m -5.()4, 992 5914 or 304-882-

bedroom house, fur ·
nished. Brown's Trailer
Park. Minersville 992 332A .

-------- - -

4 rooms and bath, full
basement, natural gas fur
nc;~ce Stern windows and
doors. Some insulation. All
new
pamt'~
Stoye &amp;
refr1gerator furntshed. 992
3090 .
.-

2 bedroom house m Letart
Falls, Ohio Otning room,
fireplace,
range
and
refngator 1ncluded. $125
plus depos1t. 1·216·532·JS..3.
TWO bedroom, furnished

1

is ·- - LOtS &amp; Aci-eag~ ~

-=_-

LOTS Real n1ce campsite
on Raccoon Creek, all
ut!lif1es available, S300
down, owner will finance,
call after 3 p m, 256-6413.

"'---- ------- ----f.'

Would you l1ke to own a
~: home of your own
We
. didn' t have $1D,OOO for a
down payment nor .$5,000
- nor evenS 1,000 Do what we
d1d Call513-592 9115
1 5 acres on Jackson P1ke
near Stock Mkt. All
utillt1es, trailer pad. $4,000.
Call 304 757 ·9479
1 acre lot $3,500, rural
water, Crabcreek Rd ,
:,Gallipolis Ferry, WV Ph.
446-2240

, BY owner, 3 apartment
· house on approx. 1 acre.
• Live in one, rent others to
-make your payment. Can
! be converted single home.
1 City water, will consider
land contract. 675 1883 9·5
pm

•
"'tt

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

2 bdr mobile home, total

1972 12JC65 Schultz, 3
bedroom. part1ally tur-.:-rnshed, gas heat, rented lot,
· •'Pri ced on Jnspect1on, 304·
• : 615· 2907

electric, 2 112 miles past
Holzers on 160, $115 Call
446 3533
2 bdr and 3 bdr. mob1le
homes. Ca\1446·0175
2 bdr. mobile home on
Roush Lane, Cheshlre, new
lot Caii304·77:1'S882.
2 bedroom, unfurn mob1le
home on Rt 35. Ref. &amp; dep.
requ.red . Call 446 4229
Mobile home, 2 bdr furmshed, in Cheshire Ref. &amp;
dep, requ.red Call 446·
4229
2 bedroom unfurn. mob1le
home on Georges Creek
Rd . Ref &amp; dep recau.red.
Call 446-•229
2 bedroom mobile home
down Rt. 7, S125 per mo,
adullsonly Call256· 1157
3 bdr., 2 baths. approx. 4
112 miles from Ga111pol1s,
good neighborhOOd, large
lot, $175 mo, dep requ~red.
Call446-2676 after6PM
3 bdr. mob de home, 5 miles
from Holzer Ref. &amp; deP

required, 1 small chilcl ac·
cepted, no pets. Call 446
2995 .

For rent 2 bdr, m0b1le
home 1n cttv, adults only .
Call4.46 3791 .
2 bedroom trailer . Adults
only. Browns Trailer Park .
614-992-3324

-FOR LEASE OR RENT ·
' '"Ntodern 3 bdr ranch near
' town. $300 per month,
· deposit &amp; references
required. Call STROUT
.REALTY 446·0008.
we will be having several
homes for rent, lease or
lease with option to buy
,. ,witt11n the next few weeks.
All over $200 per mo. &amp;
'required references &amp;
deposits For more in
formation call
Strout
1r -Realty 446-0008.
3 bdr. house, 2 baths, fully
carpeted. SJOO plus deposit,
35 ChilliCOthe Rd., no pets.
Call446·3748 or 256·1903.
,-AJr sale or .rent Lovely 3
bdr house m country set~ ting .
Convenient
to
Gallipolis or Rio Grande.
216 734-373.4, evenings
Unfurnished house for rent.
1: bdr., $160 mo., dep.
requirec:l, no utilities paid.
no pets. 57 Olive St . Phone
-1-46·7886.
&lt;.

rm
house In town.
)nquire at 918 2nd Ave.,
..Gallipolis. No phone calls ,

~- 1~

Jbrd., 2 bath. trHevel, gas
heat, rural water. Cali-446·
2957

.

For rent 104 •th Ave. Small
bdr ., no more than 2
: . ~dulls. Call 446·2957.
2 mobile homes, 2 bdr.,·one
double wide, ooe house.
&lt;I &lt;;oll675-3000 or 446·0682.

.,Jl,..,:r.ale
. . roomoverhouselOOking
for rent or
Ohio
-~

River. PhOne ""'6·1ft1S or
446-1244.

•

lf:r double house. 2 bedroom

furnish~d .
Deposit
requried. Adults preferred.
No pels. Call614·992·2749.

One bdr. furn. apt in Mid·
dlepor-f 992·7177.

baby matresses, $25 &amp; $35,
thopedic
super firm,
$95,
bedlrames$20,$25,
&amp;SJO.
Used,
Ranges,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulav•lle Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm , Mon .
ttlru Frl.,9am to5pm , Sat.
.u6-o322

Apartments 675 5548

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes ,
houses,
Pt.
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614 446·8221 or 6IN-t5·9484

,

IN M1dclleport. 2 bedroom.
furn1shed apartment,
l
small ch1ld, 1·304·682·2566.
IN Middleport 2 room ef·
ficiency apartment, 1 304
882 2566
bedroom unfurnished
apartment, adults only,
located GalliPOliS Ferry.
675·1371 or675-3812 .
FURN,ISHED
304-895 4350

apartmerrt,

TWO apartments 1n Clif·
ton, 304-675-10.4-4.

45

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeep.ng apt.,
Park Central Hotel.
~

Space for R_,e._.nt:____

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
992 7479,
MOBILE home space in Pt
Pleasant, large lot, garden
spot, free water &amp; sewage
304·675· 1699
MOBILE home spaces, Jet.
2 62 at old Y. 304-675-3248.
OFFICE space or small
business room. Private
bath 1508 Jefferson, Phone
304 675·1435

ONE bedroom, adults only,
furnished, you pay utilities,
304 675-2535
TWO bedroom trailer, 30-4
675 4088

For sale GE washer 18 lbs .
load, A · 1 shape, $110
Maytag dryer, good
shape,$70. Cai1446·8181.

2 bedroom mobile home,
furni!ihed or unfurnished,
located Camp Conley 6751371 or675 3812
TWO bedroom trailer,
SlOO .OO a month plus
depos1t &amp; ut1llties, 30•·5762328 or 576·2606 .

- HOUSeholdGOods- ----··----- --

Sofa Sleepers,
quality
guranateed Full sm 00
Queen $499 00 . FREE
DELIVERY Lifestyle Fur'
n1ture
3rd &amp;
Olive,
GallipoliS 4A6-30A5

Whirlpool
refngerafor
frost free S95, Fngadalre
TRAILER, 304 895 3486
refrigerator white S50,
avocado side by side
refrigerator S195, 30' Sears
44
Apartmemt
electric r-ange $125, Hot·
-~f,_,o~r Rent
point electric range 40'
Furnishec:l apts nice, 1 white $15, Norge heavy
washer
'$95,
bdr .• adults, steam heat, duty
dryer
S220 utilities pd . Call ~ ­ Westinghouse
.U16 after 7PM
a\locado ~95
.4•6·7398
Skaggs Appliances at out
2 bdr. aPartment unturn .• new location Upper River
beside Stone Crest
tn Crown City, Ohio. Call Rd
Motel We alSo have a parts
256-6520.
department.
- -~

Mobile home tn city central
air and heat, adults only,
dep 406-0338
2 BEDROOM apartment,
kifchen furnished. HUD

program. utilities
paid, or
11
qualifoed.
304-615·5104
304-675·7364.
APARTMENT
Cail-1-46-0390

lor

Rent.

Small furnished house,
adults only, Cai1406-0338.
~urnlshed upstairs apt 3
rms, and bath, adults only,
no pets, clean. Call 446·
1519

Nice large, 3 bdr. apt. for
rent in Rio Gral'lde. Call
6U·682·7056.
2 bdr., apt, large living
room &amp; kitchen, no pets.
Coll-1-46-3937.

4 room turn. apt. Court &amp;
2nd. Ave. 1 bachelor turn.
apt. 1st Ave., fireplace
Call-1-46·16 15 or -1-46· 1243.

a.

sec.

a.

52 - -- cB~Tv,-iiadiO_____ E~~~ent _ _ _

___

Magic Chef gas range. cop
pP.rtone in color, $75 or best
offer Call 256 1932.

--- - - - - - -

ROdger's, Tradmg Post 92
Olive St , Gallipolis Open
9 5, 6 days a w~k. Furniture, appliances, antiques Sell, buy, &amp; tracle

Effic1ency rooms b( the
week on Ma1n Str,eet,
Mason, wv. 773 5651
Twin smgle, large rooms
and yard . Pt Pleasant.
Deposit and references 1
614-263-8322 or 1 614 2632669.

USED REFRIGERATOR;
electnc range, as is; dinette set, A chairs .. Corbin and
Snyder Furniture, 955
Second, Gallipolis Call "'-"'6·
1171.

A

..k

iN 1\:lt

Sears console color TV ,
gOOd cond.. needs some
work, S60. Ph. 446-98-4.5

s4 -

Mlsc.Merchaildice-

Firewooc:l split, delivered
and stacked. Mixecl wood
S65 per cord or $3.$ per half
cord. Hardwood $75 per
cord or $40 per half cord .
Call for quotes on targe
quan1ties. Phone 2.45·5478.
New woodburning fur
nance S.4SO, Davis 700 tren cher &amp; hoe $5,500, 40 ft
Fruehauf box trailer $3,500,
26 ft. goose neck flat bed
trailer $2,500 Phone 614
256 1216
More than 100 p1eces of
brown underpinnmg for a
mobile home, used just one
year. A seven and one half
feet by 58 mch wide ova I
rug, and wh1te uniforms
S1Ze 9·10. Call-446·3065 after
4.30 PM.
For Sale: 750 and 1000
gallon PLASTIC septic
tanks State and County ap·
proved Total weight 300
lbs, Haul m your plck·up
truck Ron Evans Backhoe
Service, located 3 miles
South of Jackson on Sf Rt .
93 286·5930.

--- - -- - Bumper Pool table sohd
slate top, cues &amp; pool balls
1ncluded. Call AA6· 4347
weekc:lays after 5.

---Misc. Merchlndice
Apeco copier, Scottsman
ice machine, file cabinets,
drafting table, dentist
chair, small freezers, A cu.
ft office refrigerator. Call
388·9698.

Shotgun, Remington model
11-48, automatic, 20 gage, 5
shot, like new. with case,
S200. Ph . 245-5875, W.B.
Boston.
Stoves, closing out our' en·
ttre stock of stoves and
fireplaces inserts at dealer
cost. or
Jess. Outdoor
Equipment Sates, jet. Rt.s
1 &amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph. 446·
3670. Closed Tues. &amp; Thur.
unt1l Mer. 1, 1982.

---------

Locust Posts 992 ·6102

1972 Datsun truck, tomatoe
or tobacco planter, J pt. hitch, 8 ft. camper top,
Biuet1ck female coon
hound registered . 614·949
2545 after 5 p.m .

Oak Firewood . Call 675
2757 after • pm.
011 stove with thermostat
and blowers, 2 years old
SIOO. 675-7142.
BROWNIE outfit, IUn'tper,
blouse, complete S1ze 10,
S15. Phone 304-675-1714
LUMP coal SA5. ton
del1vered. Firewood S30
ton delivered. 304·675·7199
Four 14 inch cragar wheels
to fit Chevrolet. Two 13 in
ch mud and snow tires Ml
Military· Rifle 30 06 S100
Call895 363&amp;.

----- - ·---.-- --

tires. Hanshaw's,
Lucas Lane Road. 675·7360

Used

Citat1on gas stove. needs
new thermostat, $50 . Also
Hotpoint electric stove,
needs new element S20. 675·
7632

For sale firewood Split,
stacked and delivered $30
a large pickup load Call
4A6...S535 or 446 7993

Oak Firew~ $35 truck
load. Call 675 1828

ONE
commode
8.
lavoratory 530.00. One 6 008
Lump coal $45 for deliver . cu ft. Kenmore freezer
Firewood $30 T delivered . SIOO. call304·675·4001.
_,..
_,
Call37'1· 2617.

__ __

___ --

NEW boys bicycles-tO
speed, 2-20" Phone 304 6751464
WINCHESTER 30·30 deer
rille, 304·675-3508.
USED wooden storm door,
metal storm door, WOOden
storm windows, nine pane
solid wooden door, 30A-615·
-4444.
MENS black leat~er coat,
size 40. 304-675-6911 or 675·
1371
DEARBO~N

propane gas
stove, 55,000 BTU, $50 .00,
phone 304·458· 1042.
2 CEDAR gun cabinets. 10
guns, $225.00 each. 30A·675-

HOME made quilts, 2 for
SIS each. 1 for SlOO. phone
304-675·2117.

~..:.::::::.:=====j.,J48;;,.:9;.:,.
:.::.::.:.:::.:..::::~
- =--=---=-=- ::---- -- ---------------s~ :~
Buildlng}upplie._--__:::_

They 'll Do It EVtry Tl me
~

HCJf .,-rr.lll FN;r 'lllf'(

r,tT~

5~ --~=- ~i'~~~!

Sal•-==-=-

POODLE GROOMING
Call Judy Taylor a.t 367·
7220.
- - .. _ - ~- __ - ~-- _

--

-

1974 Plymouth A· 1 cond.
Call446·1826.

STUCCO PLASTERING
texture&lt;:! ceitlngs, com·
mercial and residential,
free estimates. Call 256·
1182.

1972 Ford L TO Brougtlam,
like new, new tires, loaded,
air cond., PB, PS. tilt
wheel, AM·FM, $625. Call
406·7991

CAPTAIN STEEMER Corpel Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brothers CUstom
Carpels. Free estimate~.
Call-1-46·2107.

19t.9 Charger-Replica ot the
'GeneraiLeee' of Dukes of
Hazzard $1,000.00 . .«6·0390

WEATHERALL CON·
CRETE - quality and ser·
vice, call675·1582.

--- ·------·"'--

PAINTING - interior and
exterior. plumbing,
rooting. some remoc:lellng.
20 yrs. exp. Cai1388-9652

-

CAPI'AIN EASY

e

AI.LEYOOP

' 80 -.oL1 THINt&lt;: I

AM A.
VAI'-1PIRE7 AND SV M"f
I(JSSING 'I'OU, 'wOU WILL
ALSO SUFFER SUCH

,., FATE?

.

73" =-

'

.

8;

DEALER wanted for steel
bvulldlngs for your area, to
handle our commerlcal &amp;
agricultural pre-engineered steel building lines on a.
part time basis. Good
profit. 614-2943273. 8•30
a.m.-6·00 p m.

., ~ -- -uveSiOck -- -· --· ---------

Young Tom Turkey's . Call
4-46-'1807 oller 4PM.

1975 Hondo XL 100 troll or
street, low mileage, gOOd
cond., $400. Call 446-1495.

-------.

--------- -

i) - -

....:,

__ _

AUtDiOrSale- - -

'

---

1981 RM 125 Suzuki, SISO,
ex. cond. 1981 LeeNee
motor cvcle trailer, S300,
ex. cond. Call675-6367.
l977 Honda Golctwlng 1,000,
tully dressed, 9,000 miles.
cat 1446·0648 aner 5PM.

--.,--------

'

MOTORCYCLE, perfect
for Christmas, 73 Honda
350~
excellent condition,
304-675-5085.

--

-, -

- - - -----

CHAR~IE'S SAL.VAGE

1970 Cedllac coupe runs
good, fully loaded, body
needs work. Best offer. 446·
tm:l.

Auto porto, . auto repair,
wrecker urvlc~ buy
eutomobUn, rediiTOraand
balteriH. 446-7717.

1976 Flat, 4 dr., 5 spd., AMFM radio, gooc1 cond.,
ti.JOO. Calf 367-0405 oner
SPM.
·

Ford Factwy flberg)m, a
II., truck topper, 3 sliding
windows, nc. cond. Asking
t:JOO. can ~-4472.

------~

197• Iuick llmlled, ti,OOO~
Cell ..... ~7 . .

PICKUP toolbox, 8 II. top-

per, :104-675·3915.

Construction Equipment
for sale. Backhoe 530 Case .
Construction, King with 2A
ln. back bucket, $4,200
Located In Chester, Oh
For more information call
collect 1·216·243'0256, ask
for Paul.

13, :IIIH75-5027.

AuloRtpl!lr

a.

Ouallly Aulabody
Paint
work. Insurance work
-como. Sunroof• In·
atolltld from t20HZ:III. Auto
Trim Cenllr,4.t6-19M.

ALMOST AlL

NOTHN/~

TH! &lt;!SlffC.S AT
THE MISSION
WERE TAUGHT
HOW TO
SfW,

I'M iMPRES'SeP!
I!'RY IMF'R!SS!P_I

I'M

1$ THERE A

THESE GAI1ME'N15
ARE ~LL

IN F'ACT, I WA6
GOING "THE!'RE
AfY!IE/.F. I'P !Je
GI.AP TO SHOW )OIJ
WHERE IT IS .•. IF

TIR~

OF EIROWN-

C'ECENT PLACE
TO !'AT AROUNP

EIA~NGMY

HEF!EP

UJNCH ~:VERY
J:lo\Y,

CON5TRIJCTEP.I

IHAi'P !JE

KEEN. I'LL
GET MY ·
P(J~SE. -

I MADE
THEN\ ...

listings~------------------

Evening television
,AlDAY

during the time the bank fund•
aretobeiL.Idilld (60m•n•)

NOV. t3, teet

CIJ NIXT QUISTION

I!V!HING
7:00

~PM MAGAZINE
QOPONIWI
INSIDE THI! NFL,
ENTIRT AINMINT

TONICIHT

.

iU'.:';.

HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
(]) TIC TAC DOUGH
tlJ) MACNEIL·LI!HRER

I

{fEe IIUPPIT IHOW Gu11t
~Wencu.

7:00
7:30

•

•WtNNIRS
YOU ASKED II'OR IT
ANQ_THIR Ufl

.Cil PAII1LYF1!UD

LAVIPINI AND SHIRLEY
~DCOMPANY

(I)
NIQttTLY BUSIN!U
RIPORT
(Ill
RK:HARD SIMMONS

~~-18: OHIO

(I •
' 7:31
7:11

lkOO

I!NTERT AINMINT

~=ORD
AND SON
_C_Ili UP DATI NEWS
.CllNBCIU.QAZINI!Thlfl
weekly aeries otferta blend ol
current new• atones. topicel
reportl •nd prDIII•e: conlribut·
lng reJ;Jorterelnclude Garrick
Utley, Jack Perklne, oauglaa
Kilter end Batey Aeron. (10
mint)

(fil ENTI!RPRISE 'Dogfight
a~er New York ' One of the
conaeQuenceeolalrllne
dereguletlon hal been ttle
cre1t1on of new airline• to
chlltenge the giants of ttle
Industry. 'Enterprlee'lollowa
N•w York Air from start-up to
ln•u~ ral Uigtu.
8:30 Cll • ITIItKI FOACI
(J)
IINWATT!NBEAOAT
IJIR~I

10.00 Cl)e(!) IT'S ONLY HUMAN
Barb an Eden and Reggie
Jackaon co·ttoal thla multi·
t•ctted paaple watching
• ap•clal, dealing w•th people
apeaklngtheltmlndaonm•ttera
of deep pertonel concern,
predj~tlons otl'low people will
r11ctln • crlele. Shlelda end
Yernellehow how art Imitate•
lilt, and Allen Funttelke with
klda kla hidden cendld camera
altutt lon. {50mlna.)
(!) IHI'I NOBOPV'I 8-'IV
HOIIIA1tnAida and Mario
Thomu trace the progreulon
Ofwomen'trotetln201hcentury

·;~:~L~~AT

10:0&amp;
t~ll

10:30

Cl) IIOVII &lt;{COIIIOV) •• "A

C_-lo-no" 1110

CJ) ' - ' . BINION Be neon
tradtltilplfl·..rip" bu1lna11
lUll for the biiCk tnd Wtllll Ol
prl1on earb to enter the
penitentiary for hi a lint
111lgnmen1 u the etate'a new

SEWING Meehl lie repairs,
service. Authorlz&amp;d Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors
Fabric Shop,
l'meroy. '1'12·2214.

TIIIIVININO NI!WI
CINUPDATINIWI
IINQ OUT AMI!RICA

4

HULK David Bun., ud 1
powerful lumber beron ~lefor
the attlflllont of the aame girl

I} __G!~,,t,_ro,.,l'-'"-""'-'.u,n,ng!L_

12:51
t:OO
1: 10

1:30

--------,-..--

NOW.HAU~I NG hoUse cool

a. llmHtone lor driveways.

"Ctr W•h" 1171
1:H ([IIIQVII·(DRAMA)•• ~
"Windom'•W•v" 1151

2:00

~-NIWI
IACHILOIIPATHIR

I BILIIVE
2:30
IURN8 AND ALLEN
1:10 ()) MOYII •(COMEDY)"

"Nolttlnl ,.reon•l" H180
3:00 Cll JACK MNNV
3:01 (() MOYII ·(MYITIRY) •• V.
UPI OF RILlY
CBN SPORTS RI!PORT
MY LITTLI MAROII
IACHILOit II'ATH!R

3:11
4t00
4~30

5:00
1:30

~

CIJ.C!l

etill ln love wllh

THE NAIHVILLI

PALACE Country atart Tammy

Wynelta and George Jones
welcome Minnie Peart, Charley
Pr i de. Terri Olbba ud Ro y

Acuff. (60m lnl.)

(]) l]ll. THI! LOY! I OAT
8 Cll ®l

CIS SA TU ADA V

NIGHT MOYIE 'High An~tlety'
11H7 Sura · Mel Bro"t~ka.
Madeline Kahn
8:05 (I)FOOTIALL8ATUADAYON

Tal
8:30 (]) C'MON ALONQ
(])
ALPAID HITCHCOCK
PRI!81!NT8

NI!WI

11:01 (() MOYII •I DRAMA) ...
"They Shoot Honea Don't
The ?" 1111
1, :30 ([I~~~Cl) 8ATURDAYNIQHT

LIVI

(I) C'MON ALONG
CJ) MOVIE · (COMEDY) ••
"HOpiCOtCh" 1180
CIJ MOVII! ·(THRILLER) ' '
"Don't Look Now" 1873
. ( I ) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) •••
"ll~.t~

Mn" tHI

(JD)t_ARLE BRUCE SHOW
CJiliBMOVII--{IUIPINII)••
"Food Of The Ooele" 18715
12:00 (J) AMERICAN TRAIL
CJJ SOUNDSTAGE 8PI!!CIAL8
'Abba In Concert' The popular
Swedlehrockgroup,onthethelr
concert tour ot the U S and
England,par!orm..omeoltt'lelr
beat known aonoa

(I)

BLACKWOOD

PABIT

cr:J

I DUGAY

t I)

LAWRINCIWUKIHOW

TLIHG~Tl!IWI)

~--LOOK
MDOUII

•

Tell ot Two CUiee ' ln Par[a, the
fury of I hi paor people
contlnu•a to grow agalnalthe
arlelooracy.
CCIOIId·

Orle!Mio, B.J. Tl'lomaa. (10

1

44 Banyan
or catalpa
DOWN
I Island

near Java

2 Set straoght
VHtenlly'a Auwer
3 SIW\1\ed
4 SCoLLish
9 Kindred
29 "- ·
waterfall 12 Filmed again
Wednesday"
5 Air-raid
16 Pup's cry
32 CorWJduin
18 Stringed
33 Jockey .
6 Steno's
lnstnunent
sande
aod
18 Oergyman
23 - podroda
:n Predlcameoe
21 Shine
39 Heat
20 Greek letter 7 ..... she
loves
25 Electra's
measure
21 B1te
me -"
brother
fabbr 1
22 Went
8 Expectant 28 Grew flat
40 Astern
pWlting
Okefenok~

-r;:~.....-...,.,...-

KJ

mlheu
tO Hairdo
41 Hawthorne's
Prynne

()

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Hore'o how to work It:
AXVDLBAAXR
11 I.ONGFELLOW

0

MDVII "(PANTAI'Y) •••

"Pell'eDr-.on'' 1177
ell IWINA'I AllK
•

1]1) ONa UIIONA CU.IIIC 'A

12 Go out of
busmess
43 Cram

I

7101 (15-CHAIIOIOII- WAf!S.

•

ACROSS
1 Noted
comedieMe
5 TIJuana Utle
10 Chinese port
II Laundry
worker
13 Belasco
II Playpen
plaything
15 Stat1oner's
product
16 Reply
to Virgm1a
17 Noah's son

38 Groom's

COLLEGE

~lOUD GOLD

7•:10'

by THOMAS JOSEPH

possum
l6 Foil the hold
t7 Some exams h--t- t---+29 Higtl 1n
pitch i mus.1
30 Meat cut
31 Card combo
31 Sullox
mean1ng
somewhat
35 Brother
Billy's niece 1-:;--;+---t36 Chinese
dynasty

SAOTHIAI
ll:~IIOARD

t!i~SaJA ~. rr'

t4

IVINI~O

mlna)
(I) CIINn.:ATI!R

I

8:00

11

PROCLAIMS

11:oo CIJ• Cll me Cll ®&gt;112&gt;•

7:00 Cll. DANCI ,IVIA

IIITIIII Gu11t at ere: Tony

'.

becau11 he
Caes1e

10:01 CJ) Tal WIII&lt;END Nl!wt
10:30 (])
ROCK
CHURCH

IA1'Ut1DAV

-d:U8A.)
1:00 (J) • Cil IAtiiiARA IIANDMLL AND THI IIAHOIIILL

MOWIU!YS UllhOII!OIIy Rt
I Ball 11&gt;1. 1"1. P..._t, 304:
675-4154,

llJ).

~

NOV1 14, 1881

I _ . 1_

tOM

IUla IIAOOII

8:05 (I) NASHVILLE ALIVI!I
8~30
MAKIN' A LIVING A.
wedding rahear1alat the
raataurantla interrupted by the
groom wh1n he announcea he
cannot marry hlalnlended

FITZ AND BONES
Bon•• gg.. underCover poling
llllllcher at aIough Inner city
high acl'loolto l11rn tt'le ldentily
of the penon or peraona who
b1dly b.nt up a teacher 11 the
tchool (60 mint)
(]) WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP
BOXING Wilfred Ben itez Yl
riot Santoa (L ivt)
t'iJe FANTASY ISLAND
COLLIOI FOOTBALL
Marthai!Ya Wutern Carolina

0 1 - o " 1t110

(]) ALLCMATUR1!8QR!AT
AND IMALL 'A11rma and
Excurelo111'
(fl PfiiONTP&amp;QaiATUttDAY

(00

G1anni Schtcchl' Soprano

CD.(!)

Rrll IAOLIY SHOW
ANOTHIR L"l
'

~mint)

rt=::.:-

Pucclni'alul completed work
mcludetlhree 1hort operu 'II

10:00

MOVII -(COIII!DY, •• "A
hon

( I ) . Cll HII HAW Guuta
Paron Young, 8wlvla, Chubby
WI.. (Repe•t~IO m6nt )

(I) -THIIICRIIN-'
dlrll f,llnilrMOret Zlne Wlllaw
and lwta Hammer ~te hldlng
troM...,..Cialreil threatened

TAl STATIIi
UPt!OLITIRY SHOP
1163 S.C. Ave .. CO'alllpoll&amp;.
4.t6-7133 Or' 446-1133.

MOVII ·(COMEDY) •• ~
ovtn1 Couplet" 1810
MY' Ul'T'U MAAOIE
.MOYII&lt;--{COMEDY)••"'

(J)

-HU.IIHOW

---_:;:;~~
ii-Upl!!lll!r(

Ii'

PRIDAYI
CINIPORTSAEPORT
LtPI OP AILIV

w..·

DOCTOII tN n&lt;1 HOUII
THI,AIIILV
PDATIINIWS
THITONHIHTIIHOW '

Giac:omo

Renata Scone lathe heroine of
each of the opern (Engllah
Subtltlu) (3hra , 30m lna)

M0\'11-(DRAIIA) ••• "tt

tt:OI
tt:ll
tt:IO

or

' JackaonCoL.IntyJall' 1976
Stare· Y~ene Mlmleux, Tgmmy
LeeJonu
12:30 (() •
(I) SCT'I COMEDY
NETWORK
JACK BI!NNY

WI
MAIHYILLI! 1111'0

JONES " BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Call 367·7471 or
367-8591 .•

Trlltico ' (The Triptych) Thlallve

production

Tabarro, ·suorAnoalloa·and

:t: iJ5i~~a.TI~r:~.

....

"..._Oirlllrlday"1140
!JD LIVE FROM THIMET 'II

U:OS .Cil CISLATIIIOVII

3:11~
.. ,.":.~w~••" 1813

'A. Town Like Allee' Aller 1
denaeroue reecue minion
thraugl'l llood•d rlvere, Jean
conquerethe CJulblck Noel
to Auatrell• to try once
agaln to win Jeen't affection,
(Cioted·Ceptloned,U SA)

PRI!SENTS 'Cumbo'

(I) MOVIE -tCOMI!DY) •••

!lJ&gt;e

3:30
~

(]) SOLID GOLD .
aCil®J WALT DISNEY

Lee Nigel Green (2 hre 30
m•n•J
(iJ). ABCN!WSNIQHTLINE
Anchored by Ted Koppel
11: 35 (I) MOVIE ·(HORROR) •• ¥.
"Lady In A Cave" 18&amp;4
12:00 (])BURNS AND ALL!N l .
()) ABC NI!WB NIOHTLINE
Anchored by Ted Koppel
FAIDAVS

(fi) IIAITIN'tiCI THIATAI

wdQ!I£flclo&lt;
• (J) {111 THE INCREDIILI

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition service,
commercial, industrial.
Ph0ne882·207'1,

I

•

INTiftPfUII 'OOritflght
Over new Vork' One of the
conltQutncel olaullne
deregulation htl been the
creation of new elrHnea to
cheltengelh• glenta or the
lnduatry 'Enterprlu tollawe
New York Air from etert·up to
lneugurtllllght

Cll HATIONA~ OIOQIIAPHIC
I!'I!CIAL

~Refrigeration

.

OH, THEY'Re

OR SEVEN·
TEEN WHEN

. -·· --c-====
i4--· ElectrJcat

~-----

. ..,. ' ..r

!JUT I WAS
ONLYSIXTEfN

BACKHOE and Septic tank
Serv1ce
Larrv Siden strlcker. 675 5580.
__

I

Cr:J(/~...

cantor Hllmalll 367-7101.

STUDDED onow lirH, 871·

77

0
'

.... ~:~;"..*~·..... ,

=-=

~~--

1978 Plymouth Vololre, 6
CYI. Cell 379-2726.·

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and III"GOmlng,
AKC Gordon aettora,
English Cocker Spanloll,
Coll388-9790.

1978 T-Bird, loaded, new
tires. 52,000 miles, sharp,
S3,800. 1979 Dodge plcWup 6
cyl .• standard, Sl,SOO. 1971
VW new paint. runs like
new. $1,-450. 1972 VW runs
great. $900, 1976 Cairlaro
350,

:

--·__. ...... . ..
-·····-··

56

HILLCREST KENNEL
BoardiOII all breeds, clean
Indoor-aut"- facllltlas.
Also AKC Reg. Dober'·
mans Cat1,....7795.

JIM MARCUM Rooting
spouting and siding. 30
years experience. Free
estimates. Remodeling .
Coli 388·'1857.

-~ - -

REGISTERED
Polled
Hereford bull~ gentle, 304·
615-2347.

DRAGONWYND
CAT·
TERY · KENNE~. AKC
black Chow puppies, CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Coil 406·
3844 alter 4 p m .

STANLEY STEEMER
Corpel Cleaning
-1-46·4208 '

--

Building materials, block,
brick, sewer pipes, Wlndows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0.
~a~ I~5 5_ 1_21._ _ ____ _

-=-~·tl_
tor_s._le::_ _::_::_

Homt
1mprovernenh

BING'S CONCRETE CON ·
STRUCTION ·Specializing
in concrete driveways,
sid~walks,
patio,
basement,
garage
floors
2 Poodle pupp1es. 6 wks. Concours low miles. exc.
old. 1 black, 1 silver. Call cond .• S3,SOO. 1973 Pontiac , and etc Free estimates. 11
years experience. Call 367·
alter 4, 406-9219.
Ventura. one owner, 54,000
7891
.
•
miles, S1.2SO. Eurelll Auto
AKC Registered Chow Sales, Rt. 554 &amp; 160, Porter,
FERRELL's
WINDON
Chow puppies. Call 446- Oh, 388·9754.
GLASS SERVICE Home
1324.
maintainance
and
76 Ford Cobra Mustang PS,
remodeling. Phone 388·
PB.
302,
new
paint
jOb,
Full blOOded Spaniel, hall
9326.
cocker ·half · Britany, 8 tires, rims. $2,700. Call .ut.·
7122
Or446
3100
.
months Olc:l, female Phone
French City
Painting
446-98-4.5. $35.00.
Residential, commercial,
1979 DOdge Omni 024 auto., interior, exterior, paper
Fish Tank and Pet Shop p s, p b, rear defroster, hanging, and texured
am-fm cassette, like new. ceilings. F"h . 367·778.4 or 3672413 Jackson Ave, Pt
Pleasant. 675 2063 Mon., $3,800.742 3154or992-7067.
7160.
Thurs , I Fri 11 to 6. Tues.,
Wed , I Sat 11 to A. Check MORRISON'S Auto sale&amp;.
Call 4.46 2801 for term1te,
our Fish Special
Henderson, WV. Phone 675· roach, bird, rodent, spider,
1574 or 675-2881.
and fleas control. Free
AKC
Dachshund,
~ --- - -----estimates, Bill Thomas. •
Pomeranian and Poodle 1977 CHRYSLER Newport,
pups, 304-895·3'158.
29,000 miles, loaded, PS, A &amp; C Home Insulation,
PB, AC, AM-FM, cruise, Inc. No Job to small or
two extra snow tires, clean- large 2 yrs experience &amp;
ONE male Beagle, 304 675
no rust. $3,000. 304·675·1311. training, Work guaraA·
4154
teed I Sav~ up to 30 to so per
FOUR dachshunds, 304-458· 1974 Duster, good con- cent on heating bills. Free
dition, AC, sunroof,75 slant estimates. Call 286·7171 or
1620
6 engine, $900. or best offer, 286·57&lt;10.
-304-675-5172.
57
Musical
GENES
CARPET
• • __1~s!_r~_~e~t! . __
7-4 Datsun B210 automat1c, Cleaning. Special rates for
Lowery p1ano console con· 304·675-3592.
Nov. and Dec. only. Call
cert,
like new, will
now and save . 61A·992·6309.
sacrif1ce,
reasonable.
Busher
400,
alto 1977 TRANS AM ..00 cu. in.
motor, automatic, red with LOCKSMITH
Service.
saxaphone . Call «6·0541.
black interior, PS, PB, AC,
Residential, automotive.
tilt wheeL &amp;·track stereo, Emergency service Cawl
cragers,
smoked glass, 882-2079.
-~
' ,
side pipes, SA,OOO. 304-675,., ,' ..... .
4210
.... ........ " ...,
RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
12
Trucks for Sale
Motorola. Quazar, and
- r · - •- - .. ·- - · · - - - •1
Farm Equipment
house coils. Phone 576·2398
1971 pickup truck First or 446·2454.
Early model Gravely trac · $500 gets it 675-1302.
tor with mower for sale,
$900. Call -1-46 1570
F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
1979 CHEVY Custom, stumpremoval 675-1331
Deluxe 10 pickup, tilt bed,
80 model Gravely tr:actor, 2 28,000 miles, l-4 mpg, exwheel, 30 in brush hOQ cellent condition, 30A-675
RINGLES'S SERVICE ex·
mower. electnc start, 8 6813.
perienced mason,, rooter.
HP. Coil 245-9420 or 245·
carpenter,
electrician.
5286 before 2PM.
general repa.rs and
v';.~.&amp;4w~~
remOdeling. Phone 304·675·
,--- - ----Gravely pllrts, used We 1979 Jeep CJ7, 258 6 cyl., 4 20118 or 675-4560.
have junked several old spd., 28,000 miles,
model t;ravely tractors Renagade package, tilt Water wells Commerclill
and will sell serviceable steering
and
power and Domestic. Test holes.
parts at 112 price. Outdoor steerlnq, AM-FM 8-track.
Pumps Sales and Service~
Equipment Sales. Jet Rts
Call aller 5 PM, 446·10'12 or 304-895· 3802.
7 &amp; 35, Gallipolis, Dh.Ph 446-1112.
406 3670. Closed Tues. &amp;
Stark's tree tr1mming and
Thurs uptll Mar 1, 1982.
1976 Ford window van. red removal Insured. Phone
&amp; white. Must sell S1,900.
576-2010.
Gravely tractors. several Call-1-46·4394.
1'181 mOdels still on stock at
greatlv reduced prices. 1978 Subaru ~WD station EKperienced carpenter
Outdoor Equipment Sales, wagon. body and engine available for home or
Jet. Rts. 7 &amp; 35, Gallipolis. need work; 4WD drive busines~ remodeling or
new structures.
Free
Ph, 446·3670. Closed Tues. works excellent. $1,575. estimates.
References.
&amp; Thurs until Mar. 1.1982.
cash or might take tractor, 675·2440.
'
oravelv or truck in on trade
NEW 1dea 2 row ph;ker 1n. 61•·992·72!17, ask for HOMEBU I LDING·Complsheller. narrow row. New Fred.
ete housebullding services
Holland grmder &amp; mixer
from
loundillon 10 roof.
#352. Also straw-other farm 7'1 BRONCO, sharp, 304·
Local
bulloer With best
equipment. 304·895·3892.
895-3550, ask for Tony.
references will build to any
stage or complete job. Also
Want to trade 48 Case trac · 1980 Chevy Sco~ole 3 /4 room
additions and
tor for cheap running car
ton, •·wheel drive, 4 spd., remOdeling. Call H. S.
3046754467.
Roctevitch. 304-5"·2730.
power steering, 28,000, g.c .,
$7,000. Coli 304-773-5150.
135 MASSEY Ferguson
Plunlb"i::n,
::===
$3250. JOhn Deere 2(110 trac· 1972 Volkswagen Bus. 882·
- _ _ !_!t"'••'-'li"'.n"''--tor $3500. Chevy ~ston 31-4.5
CARTER'S PLUMBING
pickup SIO.iO. post hole
AND HEATING
digger $250. 75 Ford pickup
Cor. Fourth and Pine
S25o0. dozer T D ' 600 In· 7~ -- Mot0rgc1n _ _
Phone 4'46·3818 or 446-4477
ternational 16,000. Other For sale 1'174 Honda 554,
farm machinery. :JO.t·576
low milage, extras, exc.
2328 or 576·2606.
83
Exc•vatlno
cond., SISO. Coil 446·0014.
'·

D1sconfinued cabinets, top,
stove, hood, sink. $1200
Dale's Kitchen Center 675
2318

Patnot Home BUilders Will
now build a 3 bedroom fully
carpeted and finished
home on your l'&gt;t . Only
$24,500 Phone 379-2617 .

SOxlO mobile home gOOd for
workshop or storage $500,
Dresser &amp; mirror SJS, kit·
chen ,table $25, 2 sets of box
springs &amp; mattress $75, end
tables S20 ea. Call 3811·'1091.

1975 Chevrolet l mpola, 2
dr , low mileage, exc. cond.
Cai1446-l281aller 1PM.

~~§~§~~:;:;~~::=r:::;::;::;~~:;;=.:=-=.::~or""-46--7100
54

II

1965 Ford L TO 2 dr., hard·

7a- Mofotang t 1 4 cyl :, PS,
PB, AC, AM - ~M 8 track,
new tires, sharp. Call 4.467838 after 5:00.

David Brown tractor, 990
d1ese1, S1900. Sears gas
wall furnace, 15,000 BTU
$150. 675 2283

Cocker Spaniel pup reg.,
stero system, Luxman
receiver with 501 Boss
speaker. Caii388-82.AO

1975 Mustang PS, PB, auto .
Call245-5669.

245·9375.

/

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

Black rod ir-on dinette
chairs with red botloms &amp;
tops, plush, good cond , SSO
Call 446-3937

7}:::_:·- Autofor s~---

lop, 351 engine, $1.595. Call

AEII\IN-

GOOD
USED
AP PLIANCES
washers,
(Jryers,
refrigerators.
ranges
Skaggs
Ap - Used heavy equipments
pliances, 1918 · Eastern 1 tires, 26.5-25C2500X25) tubes
&amp; flaps. 1 Detnot diesel,
Ave, 446-7398
·
671, complete. 61.4·522-3092.

2 bedroom tw1n s1ngle in
Pt Pleasant at 205 Poplar
Street S200 month plus
deposit 1-614-263-8322
614 263 2669

51

.

(

Wood tabli with A chairsr
$219 up to $495. Desk $110.
Hutches, $300. and $375.,
maple or pine finish.
Bedroom suites - Bassett
Oak, $675, Bassett Cherry ,
S795. Bunk bed complete
with ma»resses, S250 and
up to $350 Captain's beds,
$275. complete. Baby beds,
$99 Ma"resses or box
springs, full or twin, $58.,
firm, $68. and $78. Queen
sets, S195. 5 dr. chests, $.49
4 dr. chests, $42
Bed
frames, $20.and S25., 10 gun
. Gun cabinets, S350., dinet
te cha 1rs s20. and $25. Gas
or electric ranges, S295. Or-

2506.

:. ,:..; ';~; t: l ,: . a.-::·

'; '5 rm. house unfurn in '
eureka. oep. required, no! ' unturn. downstairs aport.
L -pets. call256- 1413.
. on Main St. VInton, Dh.
Clean, ,. rm., bath, large
0 ~ · room hoUse In Galllpollo. 1 yard porclles.
dip.
·ll'Callafler 5, 446·3945.
ret. Call245-5811.

ll· ··-------"--- - c - - - -

·

TWO bedroom mob1le
home .n Mason, adults
onlv, no pets, 30•·675-1452

Houses tor Rent

'-4 bdr. 2 112 bath bl level
' With pool off Rt 35 Call
W1seman Real Estate,
·Agency 4A6 36.43

.u6-0957

cottage at 2103 Jefferson

42

1973 Grandevllle 14 x 70, 3
bedroom mobile home,
pnced tor (Iuick sale 304882-3433

n · ve.

I ,,,.., ( M·,...,-~~ ~
~,\!".,.~~':
m'7 N
.,.. ~~

$275.

Recline~·; $175. ro 's29s.:
~.m:e~~ f~~~ t~:.:S· t~
S38
,,_
5. 1 pc..
v..-. and up.

required, adults, no pets.

2 bedroom home 1n Mid
dleport Oepos•t required
Caii614·992·591A.

HOME

1977 Victorian 14 x 70 two
bedroom , familv room, all
elec1nc Call 675·3987 or
675-3862

Sofas and chairs priced
from S285.· to 17,5. Tables.
$38 and up 10 $10'1. Hld.-o·
beds $3~ queen size $380

1 bedroom apts. avatlable
at Riverside Apts Equal
Opportunity Housing. Call
m -7721.

t -396!:..._ _ - -----J973 3 bedroom 14 x 70, underpinned 675 4064

Bradbury Apartments
2nd. floor furnished el ·
fiency, renflll &amp; dep .

- ·- -Nice 2bdr , home In c1ty,
adults, no pets . Call 446·
0958
____ ........- - - - - __

2

SSOO Sota,

chair and

7292 d' A

Ave Depos1t required 304675 4100, day

USED MOBILE
'!]6 2711.

tom an, 31 a bl

9&gt;.1\I'U ·

references required. Call
446_0173 _

(·· .. MOBILE home located in
t-~ Camp conley, extra nice
.ana clean, phone 3o.l 895-

F·

LAYNE'SFURNITURE

SOfa. chair, rocker, ot·

com
NICe 2 bdr. apt. Call 256'lh · ·~

full basement, garage, city
water and gas. Nice yard,
10 minutes from Gallipolis

;:r~e drastically reduced . schooL

~

home .

pletely redKorated

Nice neighborhOOd, close to

""'rm .• mobilehomeonan
!t! •cre, new drilled well,
P:.p.ooo.
-1-46·4394.
~ _
3, mObile homes lAx?O,
[ lOxSO, I:Zx60, Jackson. Call
. , . 286-7019.
- - - - - ---~1963 Hillcrest, 10x50, exc.
,tond . Call388·8368

Ap.orlmeml
torRent

Pomeroy-~lddleporl, Ohio

1:1, IHI

Answer:( I
vuterda~ s

I

I

)THE(

WHA'T A
CLUMSY MAS!ScUI'I:
Mle.HT c;&gt;O.

One letter almply stands for nnother In lhll 11mple A II
u!ied for the three t · ~. X fo1 lh(' two O's, etc Single letttl'ft
apoatrophel, the length and formallon of the "ordt are 'd
hintl Each dn&gt; the code letters are dUI'ert'nt.
·

Now aJangt lhl clrei8CI ltnlt1 10

form It'll turpriN '"'"'· u tug·
geated by the above cartoon

CRVPTOQUOTES

I I I I )( l I l

LI H

OZELKWUH

ZE

{Anawtrl tamorrow)

ZL

J1.1mble1 GUMMY BALKY FACILE NICELY
Answar There's a horse in the manager's olttce" A NAG

ZE

R WQF

I, I H

,.

W H I. I Z '-~ ;:

A Z N E L.

E L·H

-

.

i_

LIKL
URELE.- GGH . OT
OHAAKWO
Yealerday'o Cryptoquote: GOD WilL NOT LOOK YOU OVER·
FOR MEDAI..S, DEGREES OR DIPLOMAS, HUT FOR
SCARS.-ELBERT HUBBARD

17. ~ ofll 110 puZIIII,II t•allablllorl H
\hit
IIPII: rlf, 80!t34 Norwood,NJ 07MII
nam• addres• ~~ c J11 •n make Cl'tldtl a~abl• lo.~N~ow!!•ii!iiii~!:.J

Jumblfl f:l of,

lrDmJwnble c.

'•

I

\•

.'

�Friday, November 13, 1911

rr=======================~Collegesco~s========================~

Waterloo man hurt in auto wreck
A Waterloo man waalnjured in a and his vehicle was severely . - - - - - - - - - - - wreck . in Gallla County damaged, the patrol aalcl.
Thursday night, according to the
ClareDce J. Wllllama, 27, Sllade,
Gallia·Metga Post of the slate high- escaped InJury in 11'lwl lU vehicle
went off the left side of the road and
way patrol.
The patrol said MarVIn J. Rutt, 3'1, hit an embankment while -tilwas northbound on Rt. 775 at !he In- bound on Old U.S. 331n Melga County
tersection with Walnut Twp. Rd. 3at at 8:25 p.m. Thursday. There waa
8:40p.m. when his vehicle went off slight damage to his vehicle.
............ DI hllllfiiiCI.t.-tifvtttl~- fht
The patrol t'eported Karen A. lltniOIIICI,
the right side of the road, came back
~- $ofl:;i::ls:411 ol ........llltA t!IM ~ o1 0110. htr...
Kidd, 18, Langsville, waa cited for ~-UIICICOOf-·- . . ~
onto the road·and then went left.
.,.,, lln~.OIIIt*'tlltt. S..IIICJkabltll~~
The vehicle then struck an em- 1188ured clear distance after she Nar
adlariNd . . . IIICIIIIIII,_tlll~·
. .- · llll . . . . lllfiiiMclll..._ls
bankment and overturned , collided with a northbound vehicle ...............
llr•uiiNII......,.tt•••loiM•0..1M31, I
demolishing the car. RI1tt was not driven by Orin D. Wheeler, 23,
':,:m&amp;.';W.,"'t::
Sit·~"'1\l'lfill~::O'!
5111111
imrne&lt;iiately treated for his Injury, GaUipolis, on Rt. 7 in Galli&amp; County llltts,
IN WlfttE llf:.:IJ. IIIIft ..,_.., d!Kfc..d ,.., • • IN!
the patrol said.
tMICI lft'I'HIIION'I.MitCM!M. OIIIO.IIHidlr Mil dill. "*tf•
at 3:05p.m. Thursday.
l Rlktl,.cl.k.. $upl, rJ _._. ol Olw.
151115151
Wheeler had slowed to make a
The patrol said Paul E. McCarty,
Slatt Dl Ofll:l. ~oi!MrMCe, C'.lflhtllll oiCMrfliMet - rt1e
45, Rl. 2, Pedro, was southbound on turn into a driveway when the wreck ufll!eluped, SI!PeniCinllelll -' lnwMCt vi lilt Sl•t 01 ""· flnrllo
llllt •
Lincoln Pike at 4:45 p.m. when his occurred, which caused moderate umt.s
IT....., , _ N CD tt Hlrltlnl Sl.. ~ l#mechc•t. ~"
c~ild Willi 1t1e InS GllftiS SUCt I...,.. II 11 111!1 !S Mlltlnl'ld
vehicle went off tlie left side of the damage to both cars.
~LI""'' lhtatfrtn! ... kl I"IIAtt II! lhn ... lll..,..raattbulii'IHS II
111$11r~. lts flll..C~I coodltCII'IrS ~lit' b .,......Nitmtnllo
road and hit a tree.
Troopers said Gary L. Smith, 38, hllwe
11m M killoln _Gn Dec:aNitf 31. 1a .tdJIIIIId IUib
.00; l:l,llll•n. $212.t3U03 .to: Surplus: ,
The vehicle was slightly damaged Racine, was eastbound on Meigs UIU•5.356
91.159.025 .00: Inc."~- 1222,901.0SS 00 : hf111dt!Wit"
1
142.195.12$00: Neii:S5ds. SIOO. al9.02$ ~ C1!W1, t .1$0.01)00
and McCarty was cited for DWI.
County 1\d. 35 at 8 a.m. Thursday
IN WITNESS I'IIREtf. l MJt llrf..!IIO tioCic:l'lblcllll, lll!llt filii ,
my uti'~"' di1•M•t CoMniM. Ollrl.lllis Gly anc! llallcbert ,
The patrol investigated a two-car when his vehicle struck and killed a ci!MG
L RHc:h!ofcl Jr ,, Supt. cf ln~llf llll:t ol 011.6.
1$111 6161,
accident In Syracuse Thursday mor- deer on the road, causing slight ,$lite DfOIIIO. DeDitflllelllOIIMIQIICf, CetthCIIitltiCifr.JiiiiiCt - The
UrldriSIIAed, .ifllendfnt tllnsiiii..U l)f lht ,.,~ Obiu, lllrlby'
ning.
damage to his vehicle.
urlihU !tilt
'
,
fUM nltt&amp;CMCOol Bloolfttn...... Sl•ll llillaa. til$
. The report said a vehicle driven by
Carl D. Bowman, 21, Rt. 4, Proc- ITATI
complied wtth tilt llws olthrl Stile . . . . . tl • Mit iiiUitllllltcl
Ralph F. Neigler, 59, Rt. 2, Racine
torville, was northboWid on Rt. 7 in dur1"8 ttl. Cllllffll .,_,Ill' !ll!Md ~ lht!!l•fltJ~••pulie busirla1 ~ :
Mtt~~tt . rt~ flldclll ~~lOIIlS ~ lllf 111 11111111 ttiiiNnt to
backed from a driveway on Second Gallia CouniY at 9:05a.m. Thursday hue
lftn tt illws .. Oetembrr 31, Ill): 1llilliiiiCI ..ts.
.017 .00: b•ll•hl iu. S2.1S0.31UtUO; Sa•piYi,
Street at 7:15 a.m. and c&lt;illided with when a deer collided with his vehicle Sl.OID.Il1
S918.062,0UOO, !~COlle. 12.l1l.IH,J54 00: (lpllld•IIHes,l
Sl .18l.J36.0l .OO: Mel mets . St3o.562.G48 00. C1pit11.1
a westbound vehicle driven by and ·continued (In, The accidert $2.!100.00000
)
IN WITJI(SS WHERE«. I h.a~~e t.1w'*t "'llolcritled "f 111111t Ifill
Delbert 'fl. Teaford Jr., 38, Rt. 2, ca~ slight damage to Bowman's CliMe!
111~ 1UII.&gt;bull11 eclll CclllllllbuS. Ofllll, !filS dly 1114 ~llltl. llobm
l Rlttnlord Jr . s..~ aiiMIII'IIIU or Ohio
(Sell 61(1&gt;
Racine.
vehicle.
Sill!~~ OhtO. ~pillm!nl ot IMUIIIIte. CtniiiCflt Df~- lilt
The accident caused slight
Arthur A. Tobin, 19, Pomeroy, was undtrSIRIItd. Suptmtlendenl or Ins Ill' IIIlA olllll Still ol Oh111.1wlelly•
certtl~ lhll
damage to both 'autos and Neigler westbound on Rt. 143in Meigs Coun- STITt
FAIItM GINEUL 1. . CO al81oon11..~ . Stilt ot ~ ~
~~~ ctmPiit4111'~~ the l&amp;wsof ""' Sl.,etHiitllllt to hlllfiSIUII'!II'iltd
·was cited for failure to yield.
ty at 6:55 a.m. Thursday when his duri~
the Cllflt~l Vfll Ill IIIIISICIIII itllldllltils...,prlm tJwnen oil
N1 fon~ndal to~~dihon 15 lifloolon by ih -llliltllll'llltlll to
Troopers reported Bruce A. Hall, car struck and killed a deer, causing &lt;ni~IIA[f
h~we tftn
lol~ nn Oea!mlllf Jl. IIJIIO: Alllllllllill .st~b. •
23, Spencer, W.Va., Was westbound no damage.
SJ0.2l!UII2.60. llaW-~. $23,604.2&amp;4.00; Sl.ltlll~ ....!65.r.aGO.
lfttome \3J74.10U'(I: . EJpeod•ht•el. $801,638.00; Net ISMis.
. on Rt. 338 in Meigs County at 3:45
The (iatrol said Ethel DeWitt, 60, $661SJ)8
.w cCIIJliiii.$1,150.QOOOO
.·
,
IN WHNESS WH£REOf. I hive htttui'IIO 5ubscnbed 111 Rlllt 1rld1•
p.m. Thursday when his . auto lost Rt. 2, Bidwell, was southbound on cauSO!il
m, sell t~be•lli•ed•t Ccfljmbus, Oho, t-11 dlw 111d d1te. RObel'lt
~16211 ,
control on a curve, went off the left Rt. 160 at 6:15 a.m. today when her l lh1tht01d .lr. Su~l.cllnsuiii'ICt ol Ohio
'
S!l!u f 0!110. Otp1rtment cllnsur1nte. (eftrl~tate ol Com~~wt - Th
side of the road into a field and over- vehicle struck and killed a deer "nde'~llned, Supeunl1!!11k!nll)l'ln!.UJIII'Ice ol the stile ul Oil!l, llereby
urt olot s.f~ll
.
turned.
crossing the road. Her car suffered STAll
FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOitU INI COt4 Bborr11nlll(l.
Statec iiHIIIOil,IIM cam~lellw!lt! the l1wsol lhil SllteiJI)Iable ''''
\
Hall was injured, but not treated, · moderate damage.
lnd ll aJthoum:t dUIIRI the 'U11ent Yfll' It ltlfiUd II fhrl; 51ill ill
approplllfl! business ofiiWIUIICt Oil lilt fllll1111l ...... Is fllllfl(lolil
concti!IIIA IS shhn by lb 1nnu~ slltetntfd to •
-.n •lt~N1 011

=

RIBBON curriNG CEREMONI&amp;'l were held
'l'hui-sdly mol'lllDC to olflclaUy opeD the aew Dollar
General Store located In the former Ben Franklin
bulJdlng on E. Main St., Pomeroy. Cu111ng the ribbon Is
Carmel Sisson, mall8ger uf the Pomeroy Store. On the
lefl Is Bill Parks, operations mariagor of , Dollar

General Stores uf Scotiaville, Ky., and on the rlglll Ia
SaUy Icard, Cbes~, district DI8D8ger. The
ceremonies were attended by Pomeroy Mayor Claren·ce Andrews, Interested Pomeroy boslnes1 people and
Chris CaUicoal who represented the DoUar General
··
Store In Qaillpolls.

Orientation to be

Columbia running·
smoothly today
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)Colwnbia's astronauts, working
aloft "on a day-t&lt;Hiay bosis," flexed
the shuttle's ~emarkable space ann
today for the first time - successfully corripleting a test essential
to future shuttle missions and the
success of this one.
The ship's return to Earth could .
come as soon as Saturday, as late as
Tuesday. A fuel cell failure
thre'atened to shorten the mission
but the ship and its crew were
soaring smoothly and ~afely !57
miles above Earth.
wliatever the length of their
mission, Joe Engle and Richard
Truly were intent on completing a
busy flight plan jammed with ex·
periments.
"The ann is out and working
great," said Richard Truly after
exercising the 5().foot, canadianbuilt mechanical crane. "The
movement is much smoother than it
was in the sims (simulations) .
There's no jerkY movement whatsoever.''
The ann, unable to lift its own
weight on Earth, is designed to
deploy 60,000-pound satellites in

held Nov. 28

'

Members of Drew Webster . Post
39, Am~rican Legion, wbo would like

space. Television pictures showed it
practically waving down at a blue
Earth - an image as fascinating as
the moment of launch.
A camera was perched at the
elbow hinge on Columbia's Remot
Manipulator System - the arm.
This provided a visual tour of the
.cargo bay, showing Mission Control
the scientific sensors taking
readings of Earth.
Another viedo shot showed Engle
- weightless, grinning broadly trying to steady himself in Columbia's middeck while taking pictures.
Engle was asked to photograph
thunderstorms over Australia as
part of a second experiment.

to attenil the field service orientation at Post II, Lancaster, on Nov.
28, at 1 p.m. are to call 992-2913.

Southern yearbooks
may be picked up
Southern High School 1981 year·
books are now available and may be
picked up at the high school from
8:30a.m. to3:15 p.m.

Area d~ath~[

Nora Cross

rites will be conducted at the grave
by The Plains Veterans of Foreign
W

may call at the
I ars. I Friends
h
unera
ome, 168 Morr1s Ave.,
.
I
anytime a ter 2 p.m. Saturday,

Women's Organization, the Eastern r-;::::::;;;;;;=====~~==11

Featured on channel three Satur·
A meeting of the Winding Trail
day night at 7:30 p.m. will be a Garden Club will be held at 7:30p.m.
segment on Meredith Manor School Monday at the home of Alice Thornof Horsemanship. Waverly,W. Va.
. pson with Peggy Crane as cohostess.
The school is operated by Ronald
Meredith 'son of Richard and Mary
Meredith, Rt. 2, Pomeroy. It is
reported to be the only accredited Answer five alarms
school in the U. S.
·
Five calls were answered by local
License issued
emergency units on Thursday.
At I: 17 a.m. the Middleport
A marriage license was issued to Emergency
Unlt took Edward
Larry Eugene Spencer, 34, RaCine, Owens from S. Third to Veterans
and Beatrtice Kay Avis , 36, Memorial Hospital and at 4:58 that
Coolville.
unit took Blanche Gilkey from

Club to meet

To meet Sunday

Star and the Garden Club in Racine.
Surviving are her husband, Andrew ; two sons, Edwin of
Chillicothe, and Paul of CQllins,
Ohio; a brother, Clarence Yeager of
Letart j 8 grands00 1 a nd Rita JO Hill
• e, wbom she reared in the
of. Racm
home •
' . WI"II be held 8 t
F UJ1ef8 I ServiCes
1:30 p.m. SWlday at the
. Letart Falls

i"'

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.........

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L IQich!llrcllr . S...plollmulf!UOIOiwl

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Slttul 0!110 .i)epKIJwtrttolln~ urlntl!, CerllliUit ofCorn!Hillft - Thtl
=If~::· S.,peu~teodtnt ol lnWllllCt oil~ Sllle o] 011111. '-rei~?

Siockman ...

fll.•
'

hl~e been as !olns on Deeem~~r~ 31. 1930: Allmlltett mets!
SU6,n92.1!82 oa: L••billtiu. I ISU8S ,91• oo: s~r~ln .'
m.903.4112 oa : tnum ~. 1''0 ,26~ . 716 oo: hpuditme!,'
StlU21.XJO.ooHelrtssets.S4 .706.:168.0ilCt~~rt~tst . I();I_S86. oo
IN WITNESS WH(Rf:Of, I hm heltllnto l uhwllbfd my &gt;~~me lllld
CI~&gt;Wdmrmltobellllledlt(;()~mhus. Oh.:~. tflrsd.lrtnddlle_ f!.l&gt;l!!l.
L. Ratcntt~d Jr. s..pt ottnslllllllce or 01wo
!Stat 6411

camot!tdwdhtll!!llor.i~lht!SIIIIIpp!ICI!IIf,t(l.lfllrtao"y.,.t

illfll'!ilftecurrtfii~UIICIIIIISIC!ini!IM;5111!11l . .Qp'llltbwllt1!111
~~~·-e
II~ flflinCI~I cO!Id!IIOn 15....,.., lis .. IIIII[ 5111emenl to
1\lo~ ~A IS ftlow~ IJl OeCfmbei lJ. [91&amp; o\d1111~fd 11wb,
19l': lt4.82600.llillolllln. $64 HJ6.09Uik Surpllts. $2S.D11.1l21JJ;
13079 697
· oo:

~fi.m·
C:C::'s?.~~~·
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IN WllNESS WHtRHW'. I llu~ l'ef-~ su!IK11bed rnr Alll'lt in~

l$ci166U

Sll7, JD6J!71 00: l1111k1t1~ 1!11,977 .!11

S.tllilll, Sl6,m,665 00:
»7.s::,.4. 397Dl t•JIIl:nllll:ur6.
.19U05 00: Nt\ 1$Hi ~.
Sl8.1&lt;?9.09 JOO:~III, SJ13l426.00
IN '1\'IINESS 'IWIERf:OF. I hiVII htrtuflllllllbscnbeG Ill\' NM 1M
caultd"''M~ttobutfii.Oatcokl"'bu~. o.,.,. thisN,•n~d•te ROO.rt
L. II1Lthl01~ Jr . Su,t. ol tmunntl: ot 011.,
(SNI66JI
f~t:on'Ml .

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.
Take advantage of our special sal.e this
weekend on clothing for you and your fa11JJ.Iy _furnishings f~r ~our home. Visit everv:dt'Pa'rt·
ment - you II hke the selections arid sp.e cial
values.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SPAGHEnl DINNER

I
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~........

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SHUTTLING HOME - After the space · sbat1le
Columbia touched down safely at Edwards Air Force
Ba•e In California Saturday alternoon, a . helleopter

hovered over the ship. See story and addltloaal pictures on D-ZtoCiay. (APLaserphato).

City's $5.5 million water
plant nearing completion
By KEVIN KELLY
, ~~-, longer tllan ~. and the city il • trouble.
.
Tlm~tlneiSIIIIf
presently nliO!IaUng with the con- .· · "~owmanytlmesinone'sllfeisa
.GAWPOIJS - GaUipolls~ most tractor on liquified damages.
w~ter treatment plant created?" the
ambitious undertaking in recent
The plant structure is 99 percent superlntendomt' 1111111:d. "lt'a almoel
history, the $5.5 miltion James A. finished, although Northup said like the Columbia '- the overrun on
Northup Water Treatment Plant, is what's needed now Is a smaU that was something like three
slowly but surely reaching com- amo.unt of wiring on equipment, ad- years."
pletion. ' .,
justments on the chemical feeders
When the plant Ill operating and
Jim Northup, · the waterworks And aU-around "fine tuning."
handllng an anticipated four mi!Uon
superintendent for whom the plant is
Plant staff have. beei1 involved in gallons of water per dl!y, Northup
named, said F:riday the Cheslnut . the past two wee~ in experimenling and other ciiY offlctals bope they can
Street faclllty is "subslantiaUy com- with the chemicals . used in treat- expand their service and bring in
plete," meaning the plant could be ment. Some water has been more customers, particuhirly
ready for a dedication in another processed and distributed to proepectlve industry and other
five weeks.
customers.
businessea optioninl! the develop"I feel at this time we will have it
Northup said several complaints ment land off Upper River Road and
going full steam," he said.
were received from customers abOut west on U.S. 35.
·
the taste or chemical content of the
The old plant on Mill Creek Road,
The Qrigiruil completion date of water, but he explained the
opened
In 1896, preSently handles 1.7
April 17 was delayed due to chemical testing stopped last week.
miltion
gallons
of water per day and
manufacturer and contractor
The PH content and alkallnlty of
is
being
used
as
thjo backup while the
problema, and by tnid-swnffier of. the water, caused by the testing, was
flcials were hoping the place would responsible for the taste, Northup new plant is eased into exiatence.
When the plant is fully
be operating by early fall. ·
said.
Groundbreakinti on the plant was · "These are normal ·startup operational, the water department
held Nov. 20,1979.
·
problems," he explained. "It's like a will still have the old bulldlns. bot
Jnstallalion of new 'wells on the new automobile. When you first bUy nothing definite has been decided on
city's east end to handle additional it, it's not perfect, and if yqur ser- Its future use. Northup said several
fiow by Moody's of Oayto, took viceman doesn't check It, you're in options have been considered;

\

·~

\ \\ Pendants }

·~with

Pe~~lity. .

RECEIVES PILOT UCENSE - PhyUIB Haekett,
Middleport, reeeillly received ber pUll'• ufollowlq a 14 -~~~ - · Willi PbyUIB Is her Ia-

pendants of
14Kt. gold overlay.
Perfectly
matched to your
own personality.

•

Phyllis Hackett, Middleport, first Iady
to earn pilot's licens~ at Mason A.irport

•

...

By KATIE CROW ·
Tlmn l!leallllel Writer .
MIDDLEPORT - A Middleport
woman has becclme the lint flmlle
·to receive 1 pilot'• ~ 11aee
MaiiJII A1rJiort wall lnlo .-Ice 13
yean 180. Mrl. Gecqt (l'b)illl)
HtocUtt, Sevelllb Slntt, .... campleledall the nee z •'l'~
II to obtain her pllat'alll:eaee IIIII II
blcclnllnll•illll!lllllld pilOt.
Aa' Phyllia
.. ao aptly pula It:. "It has
.

FAMILY RESTAURANT
.

·PH. 992·5432

•'

:~·

supervllor Joe Woodall (left) and Dean. Newman, a
waterworks supervisor, examine the •ludge press In
the Cbestnnt Street bulJdlng.

Pacific Coast hit by
second storm in .2 days

---~---

f

.

. ,

CROW'$
I

'

UISTAINTII.UJ.Y COMPLETE - 1be words •ed
by elty olflelall to describe tbe $5.5 million James A.
Nortbap Water Treatmenl Plaat, whleh obonld be
ready lor fuU operatioo In about five weeks . .Plant

----USE OUR LAY·AWAY PLANt - - -

Expires
Dec. 1, 1981

SYRACUSE DAiRY BAR .
Phone 992·5049

.

.

'
g~• «i:.c.. Wix .,,..,;;;,

lltfeb~

'""'"
'"" .
twtH cnv Fill INS coot "''""uPQios. St111 ot M111nr10ta, 111s

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Shtf.otOilOII. ll!!J"Irlll!nlottnsu~tll(e.tfrhhuteoiClm~~~~~tf-lht'.

IJI(JtfSOCfted. SuPtl1!1ter1tlenl ot lmllltfttt ot lilt Slllt ~OhiO,

I~IU/101tfc ItS founcttl toOdfi.-JA &lt;S S..... Q t., ~1 •tnUII l(d@men111:1
~m ~ IS loilalu C111 O!tftii!JII ~ J!IIO Adftliled USI~.

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'

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

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

8

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

Any Regular$7.85 Deluxe 15 in. Pizza

Wlth Joe Engle in command and Riehard Truly
beside him, Columbia hit Earth right on time, right on
target: the oil-black centerline on a wide-open runway
at Edwards Alr Force Base in Callfornia's· Mojave
Desert.
.
"The bird is real solid," Engle said just minutes
before landiJI@. · .
He guided the 1116-ton winged spaceship onto runway
23 on expansive Rogers Dry Lake. It was 1:23 p.m.
PST; 54 hours, 13 minutes and 10 seconds after launch
from cape Canaveral.
Croo:Ws cheered "Go" as. Columbia passed overhead,
en route to final approach. Mission Control gave its OK
for "autoland" and computers brought Columbia to the
hard-sand floor.
"It'• a great day for the Ace MOVing Co.," shuttle
communicator Rick Houck said from Mission Control,
Houston. This was the second II( four test flights for the
· shuttle. When the ve.hlcle goes operational, late next
year, it will regularly deliver satellites and other scientlfle cargo to space.
Columbia, the first craft to make a return trip ' to

coot

~Y '/ 1U:JY or Yt,~:l · S/11

Donald (Don) Hooper, 80 , Hooper
Road, Shade, died Thursday. at
O'Bleness Hospital in : Athens
followinganextendedUiness.
Mr. Hooper was born in Athens, a
son of the late Clifford and Bessie

~~,,.til ~ '~'"'.

phell wd~tlllllwsulll'oiSIIIIIpOhc:ablet0• 111Jldoslltbon.!W~ urlllr'
'"'
,.,.,,Its~""
1n~ur•nce,
ftna~c111 t:lllldllrDn ts : hnn bv ~~ 11'1111111 1111en~~t J.
to

dUIHllllittUfle!liY911t\llnSK1 1nlti15S1IIIIt51PIIflll/lllh!bugnenbt

:.t•nu·· ' nv '' ,.

Donald Hooper

&lt;

nMi IHSUIIANCE. CO at M1t•aukee. Sill! of ~nt hiS com '

uNION MNK£RSINSUUNCE
Dill». Stllteotlton, ~n
OOmt!llt&lt;l Wll~ !he II'II'S of tillS Sllle tllflllclllle II ~ Inc\ r; aoll'larillld

~

follow in Letart Falls
Friends may call from 2-4 arid 7·9
p.m. Saturday al Foglesong Funeral
Home in Mason and one bour prior to
services at the church.

35 Cents

space, came borne iike a giant glider, starting descent
an hour before touchdown with a· ~minute burst of
two engines that broke its orbital speed 157 miles above
the Indian Ocean.
. In minutes, the shuttle slowed from 17,345 miles per.
hour to about 16,000 mph and dipped into the upper
edge d the atmosphere where gravity gripped the
vehicle and protective tiles began to glow with .....,ntry
heat.
.
Young and Truly left their weightless world after 36
orbits.
Diving to Earth, her speed decllrung, Colwnbia
passed north of Australis and headed out over the
Pacific. During the hottest part of reentry, temperatures up to 2,700 degrees seared the underside of
the ship, generating ioni2ed gases· that blocked communications between crew and ground for 16 tense
minutes while the ship was over the North Central
Pacific.
The spacecraft dashed out of the blackoilt and zeroed
in oo the desert runway 500miles away.
"You're tracking it right down the line," said Shuttle
Comtnicator Rick Hauck in Houston.
Columbia crossed the California coast north of San
Luis Obispo at 138,000 feet, Its speed now trimmed from
. ~times the speed of sound to 61&gt; times.
··
The ship passed over the central California towns of
Bakerafield, Tehachapie and Mojave before sailing in
over the Edwards' runway at 53,000 feet and ·at the
Continued on A-4

troub!Hhortened flight .

1

L R11thford II., Supt. Ill IMIII'IIII:e ot OhiO

, Itt' W ,, v A mer Ic.l

~e'::e;u

sections, 78 Pages

A Multimedii tnc. Newspaper

By ROBERT UICKE
Alledated Preu Writer
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. {AP) Spaceahip Columbia crowned a busy, bittersweet
mission Saturday, bursting brilliant through Caljfornla
cloudcover to Ita second graceful landing. Touchdown
provided a dramatic desert finale to the shuttle's

ctusft[ mw \NII~bnlti•W 11 ~lt.i1:1bus. Ott.:~, 1M dily Jllddlle.lloblrt'

Sttlecl Ohlll . Ol!patl1'11'11tiii ii\SII I I nO! . Certlfiutto1Cam(lll~nU -1~
uflde~S~ened. Su~~tnnlff1Hnt ot tn$~ance ol the SlJte ot Oh10. tftftbv
""tohe~ tll1t

•om.,_
(" ...,.

11

Sunday, Nov. 15, 1981

Columbia lands
Without a hitch

11. 1910. Ad111ined •swts, $10.ll9.tl4.001 OO. l!lllilllttS.

~~~~~~~================~~:!

.'100
OFF

Micldleport·Pomeroy-Galllpolls-Polnt Pleasant

$5 .669 001.340 1!6. Surplus, ~ . 620 93 I.K&amp; 00. l~'cme.,
SU01.445.1ti.OO. EliPtrWIIIIIH!S. $5.lU.7S .100 00
IN WtlltESS M4(R£ct. I h1ve httfllnto Sllblctllled IIY Rille 1m!

clllst1lmys9ttobeaf~ud•tCctull'lbus .OIIII. Ihltdfly•I'HIIIIIf Rtbld

Dbintt

.. _.J tll!ualfu4
UIWJ

Headley St. to Veterans Memorial Hooper. He was retired from the U.
and at 7:51 a.m. took Rose McDade, s. Anny having served for 24 years
The Meigs County Genealogical S.
Fourth Ave., to the Holzer
Society will meet at 2 p.m. Sunday at
Medical
Racine
Unitthe
at · World
taking War
part II
in. both
World
War I and
the Meigs Museum, Butternut Ave., 2:57
t,ookCenter.
Jack The
Rankin
from
He was
a member
of
Pomeroy. The public is invited.
, Forest Run Road to Camden-Clark
The Plains Veterans of Foreign
Hospital In Parkersburg. T~e
Wars and The Plains AMVET ChapSyracuseUnitat4 :40p.m. took Billy te~urviving ~ his wile, Ruth
Halley from his residence on Graham Hooper; five sons, Pat,
(cont1·nued from page 1)
Thanks•iving dinner of ''wide- Bridgeman St. to Veterans
Houston, Tex.; Mike of Columbus·,
o
Memorial.
mouth has~. foot-in-the-mouth filet,
Cliff, Greensboro, N. C.; Tom, with
stuffed crow ... humble pie with
the U. S. Anny in Nuremberg, Gerscapegoat cheese (and) sour M
many, and Tim, at home; six
grapes."
eets Monday
daughters, Donna Slavin, MidThe Senate's assistant
dleport; Debbie Nelson, The PlainThe Bend 0' The River Garden
Is; Christie Jacks, Syraco•se; JeanDemocratic leader, Alan Cranston
of California, said Stockman should Club will moeLat 7' 30 p.m. Monday
ne Hollingsworth, Greensboro, N.
at the home of Mrs. Wilson Csr·
have quit becai!SO Reagan will great
te M he will
C.; Belle Ohlinger, Mason, W. Va.,
difficulty getting budget pro•rams pen r. em rs
make corn
and Csndi Hooper, Bamberg, Ger"
husk
wreaths.
approved by Congress "as long as he
. many; a slater, ll««hy Gardner,
had in charge of that operation a r;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~l
man who has confessed to... loose
talk."
.
lEV fRY MONDAY NIGHr A r
When the question of his
credibility with Congress was put
directly to him, Stockman replied to
reporters: "I can't judge that, but I
would only say this: that almost
anything other than, maybe, an indiscreet quotation ... in ·that article
basically reflects things that I had
Served with
been saying In . our private
Choice
of Salad. Roll
deliberations as well as in public
and
Beverage
conunents."

I
I
I
I
I

Vol , IS No. 40 .
Copyrighted 1981

.

United Methodist Church with the ~;;;;;;;;~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Rev. James Clark officiating~ 1

DINING ROOM ONLY

.....·--·-·--·--·-

Lancaster I and 15 grandchildren.
. "II be beld t 3
S
Servl·ces WI
a p.m. un·
day at the Hughes Funeral Home In
Athens with the Rev. Fred Shane of..
ficiating. Burial will be in the Athens
County MemOry
.
G8fde Rs. Military
,

Nora c Cross 60 Rt 2 Racine
·
' in ' St.· · Anthony's
'
'
died Thursday
Hospita.'l, Columbus.
Born Sept. Z3, 1921, in Point
Pleasant, she was the daughter of
the late Archie A. and Arizona BlanChe Roush Yeager.
She was a fanner, a mem her of
the Letart FaUs Uru"ted Methodist
Church, the United Methodist

Scott Sprague, 18, Tuppers Plains,
appeared Thursday in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court before Judge
John C. Bacon for senlencing for a
prior plea of guilty to a charge of
breaking and entering in connection
with a break-in Aug. 'll, at Shenang
Springs Night Club.
Breaking and entering is a felony
of the fourth degree carrying a
possible penalty of not less than six
months nore more than five years in

Plans are being finalized for the
Meigs Alwnrii football game to he
played at the Marauder Stadium in
Pomeroy at 7 p.m. on Saturday,
Nov. 21.
The opponents for the alumni will
be the Meigs Warriors, an independent football league team in
this area a short time ago and
coached by C. D. Mcintyre.
Coaching lhe alumni group are
George Nesselroad, Bub Stivers and
Larry Lemley.
· The game is sponsored by the
Meigs Athletic Boosters with all
proceeds going to the athletic dePf!r·
tment of the high school.
Tickets are S2 for adults and $1 for
students and are on sale at a number
of locations in Pomeroy and Middleport.

tmts • •

1

1

Dr. Mateo P. Dayo, New Haven,
appeared Tuesday before Judge
''Super,'' he said, and went about the John C. Bacon in Meigs County Common Pleas Court to enter a volwi·
task.
tary plea of guilty to a charge of
falsification.
Hospital news
Dr. Dayo has a medical practice in
Middleport and was indicted by the
Veterans Memorial H"'pllal
grand jury in July of this year.
Admitted-Edward Owens, Mid·
Or. Dayo was lined $750 arid
dleport; James Meadows, Portland; placed. on probation for a period of
Blanche . Gilkey, Middleport ; one year. Dayo was represented by
Virginia King, Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Attorney Charles Knight
Discharged-Leona Hubbard, Ed- and Fred W. Crow ill, prosecuting
ward Templeton, Florence Musser, attorney, represented the State of
Nellie Price, Marie Dixon.
Ohio.

On TV Saturday

Alumni game Nov. 21

•

.

~~

Georgia ........ 24
Auburn ......... 14

Michigan ....... 28
Purdue ......... 10

Pittsburgh •.•••• t8
Arm.y ••••.· •••••• 0

•

.

Enters guilty plea

On probation

Sprague was given a suspended
sentence and placed on probation for
a period of five years, it being a condition of his probation that he com·
plete an alcohol-drug rehabilitation
program.
Prosecuting Attorney Fred W.
Crow Ill, representing the State of
Ohio, had recommended a minimum
incarceration of six months.

Ohio State ...... 70
Northwestern .·••. 6

l!o

Meigs County happenings., ..

prison.

I

Clemson ........ 21
Louisville • , •• , . . . 0

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been quite a challange," while cin the

ather band her inllructor, Roaald J.
Drowllln&amp;, Pomeroy, aya Phyills
lita been i "very lood and dedicated
stu:tent..''
·
It toa11 Phyllia 14 montlw to camplete tile COIII'Ie. 'l'llll iloeluded 20
hGurl ollnltnlcUon and 20 boura of
BOlo.W\li'IL In the IO!o wmt na a 10
haur
~ flllhl, I ~Jtal of
IIIII mllellhal had to be llewn In 100
mllelep.

en.

On her flnl300 mile flight lhe ran
Into bid -!her between Wheellag,
W. Va. IIIII . Urbana. It waa
•ery for her to make a
decltdGa, wblcb lhe did, tllld luded

'*

Newwk. lbe can11ctec1 the
wlllhlr iidvllor and fOUDd lhlt she
could mUt It biiDe ~Mad of the
sllirm.
Her _ . . lllkllle flillt ....
frllmPolat ~to WIIHllng and
ContiDDed 1111 A-4
'
Itt

By The Auoclaled Preos
Winds reported gusting to 100 mph
blew down a doun redwood trees
and whipped the Pacific Coast in the
second major stonn in two days
Saturday. while parts of the lower
East Coast were battered by gales
and high tides. One person . was
· killed in a storm-related aceident,
officials said.
Flooded roads, powerless bomes
and daJnaCed property were !ell in
the wake ol the storms Friday that
streldled frllm nortbern California
to Oregoo and Inland to ldabo, and
!rum VIrginia to Florida In the East.
. In Wuhlneton, a •year-&lt;~ld man
was killed.after high winds blew a ·
tree a~ the power line leadln8 to
his Maury llland home, pollee oald.
"It caUHd his power to go out,''
. said lilt FCII'I'IIt lnllee. "He went
outside with his wife and 1tlelopted
to move tbe wire with a stick or a
pole tllld came In contact with the
wire tllld -elec:trocufed."
Tile Cout GIIII'CI upended a
illlrdl for tft whole boat
broke apart In lllomly liU olf Silo- Belich, Calif., Tbundly and for
1man IIIII at-In
the oune
clay olf Olk llland, N.C.
Tile J1II)UillalnOUI tldea on the East

a-

v

.

1

\

Coast were pushed inward by gal&amp;force winds and caused major
erilsion at beachheads and at the
historic Cape Hatteras Ught House

off North carolina.
Friday's wind gusts arCund Boise,
Idaho, reported to be up to 100 mph
Continued on A-4

Inside today•..
·Area deaths ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• A-G

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Insert

Extended forecast, state weather
Mostly sunny today~ Highs In the low tltlo. Chance of precipiiation
nearzeropercent. Windssoutheaaterly!OII)PI!tonight . .

ExteadedOhloF~t-M~throutlhWedneaclay: Fair
weather Monday and Wednellday. a.nee ollhowua Tuesday. Highs
5WO Monday and In the upper 4111 to the lllld-60e Tuesday and Wedr-say. LOwa In the 301.
...

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