<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14795" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/14795?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-11T14:36:29+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47014">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/bf408db98e8f1341305c3d8ae1a34af4.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f3f22dba31e977034aa4f5f10539d175</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="47070">
                  <text>Reagan challenges Soviets
to sweeping arms cutbacks
BJLAWRENCELKNUTIION ·
A••claleii~Wrlter

WASHINGTON (AP)-'- Pnlldent
ReapD challqed the Soviet Union
today to take "a giant llep for
~" by Joining the United
stalelln a aweepiDg reductiona r1
n~ and conventional anna
~andarwndtheworld.

In

In a ~PMCh televlled Uve to
EUlQRI · and the United States,
Reqansaldhela~tocancel

deployment of Penhlng n and
jp:OUIIII-Iaunched crulae mlalllee to
NATO foreellf the Sovlela c11amantie their SS.20, 88-4 and · SS6
rnllllle8.
.,
"Thla wOUld he an hlatorlc step,"
Rt1111n said. "With Soviet
aareiment, we cOUld together substant1ally reduce the dread threat of
nuclear war which hanga over the
people of Europe.
'"l'bla, like the first fOOialep on the
mDCIII, wOUld be a .giant step for

•

,e
Voi.30,No. U3
Copyrighted 1911

12 PIECE COMBINATION

~

SOCKET
WRE
g,

H SET

BOX

«:

ALL THE SOCKETS
YOU'll EVER NEED!
114" and 3/8"

Beautifully Designed
Felt lined Drawers
Mirror Inside Lid

[r

WOOD JEWEL

~11

ss•• '
#31243
:::~~~~~~~~~~~~' ·

The Entertainers:·

Crash kills four Navy men
Food Processor from GE,
the Super Fast Work Saver!

SALEs
REG. $20.00

(d,) Rnchor Hock1ng

NORFOLK, Va. - Four Navy men were killed Tuesday when their
anti-submarine warfare plane crashed into the Mediterranean while
operating off the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz, the Navy said. .
The s.:!A Viking aircraft was carrying oul routine flight operations
about a mile from the carrier·when the accident occured, said Lt. em.
dr. Tom Connor at Atlantic fleet Headquarten in Norfolk.
'!'he Navy said the crash occured about 70 miles northwel.t of Sicily
about 10:45 a.m. EST, or 4:45 p.m.local time.

• Sllcea, chope, lhreda, grate•,
~rumba. MlxH ye111 breed dough.
2·1n·1 rtveralblo Food Proceuor
Dlac. Slalnleaa-IIHI Hrralod·
odgt knlle blade. On/OH ond
Pulle·On awllchea.

G. E. LIST

First round talks 'chaotic'

S()7"

48''

G. E. REBATE

SAOO
.,

#FP·l

'M&gt; set t h e table for America:·

..

::&gt;~~~~~~~~~~~~~
. ..
..
.. '· '• .. .. '• .. ..
,.,.. .. ,_ '•:..;. ·- -~.·
..
~ ~~~~

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

"THE EVERYTHING STORES"

101 Sitth bt.
HunlinrtDtl. W.Va.

1~01 I.Jt~wn

Potnl

Awe
W.Vi

Pl~n l.

WARSAW,' Poland - Solidarity and the Communist govemment
metfor nearly eight hours Tu03day in a "chaotic" first round of talks
, on the Polish crisis. Both sides expressed hope that coo;ICiliation will
end the tunnoll that has swept the nation lor more than a year.
Beyond designatlna four Joint negotiatlna leallll1, which are to begin
. detailed deliberations on economic issues Thursday, no binding action
, .was taken. ·
. "These w~ talks about talks,'' said Solidarity national spokesman
. Marek Brunne. "The most importaDt thiag is that the talks are going .
· Alii with the government." ·
: Trade Uniofl8 Minister Stanislaw Ciosek, the chief goverrunent
representaUve, sail\ the initial bargaining session was "a bit chaotic"
because of the ranaeoftopics raised.
·

~-

FRUTH PHARMACY
'

Ji4 JlcUon P•h
b.1lllpohs. 0 .

120 W. 2nd Sl.
Wellslan, 0.

ll,

\)
, ,

ALL STORES
OPEN 1 DAYS
I WEEK

2 sections. 11 Pages
15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

1..

$10.00
VALUE

Se t Contatns EiQhl eac tc
16 oz Iced Tea , 12 oz . Bev erage .
9 oz. Rocks. 7 Ol - Juice and
7 oz Sherbet . Home Ent ertamm en t
Bookl et mcl uded
1 Set. 19 Poun ds

'

enttne

Holden bled' to death after fall

,,

40 PIECE
GLASSWARE SET

•

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio' s mission and the juvenile judges.
Under the compromise, the comhas sent Gov. James A.
Rep. Thomas A. Pottenger, R, missiom - renamed the department
Rhodes a maJor bill reorganizing the Cincinnati, the c)lief sponsor, said of youth services by Pottenger's bill
youth colllll1ission and overhauUng both sides made concessiOns during - would retain the programs. Bu\
the Senate deliberations, although the judges would have to approve
the ~tate's Juvenile Justice system.
early release of any yQungsters comOne
of
the
main
thrusts
of
the
.
with some reluctance.
La! ANGELES- 'Actor William Holden hit his head on a table after
Legislation
is
1o
have
the
state
sub"But
I
think
they've
pretty
well
.
milled by them to the state system.
a drunken fall In his apartment, then lay down and bled to death, the
sidize
local
rehabjlltation
prograllll1
made
their
peace,''
he
said.
coroner reports.
·
.
.
Another major part of the bill
... It may aeem strange lo us, but the telephone was never picked up," . 1 and give Juvenile court judges a
stronger
role
In
the
release
of
errant·
As
approved
earlier
by
the
House,
provides
for mandatory minimwn
Coroner Thomas Noguchi said Tuesdey. "It seemed that Mr. Holden
youngsters.
the judges - who arc criticized sentences for lelonies - six months,
was not aware Of the severe Injury to himself."
Final action on the measure, when the conunission releases a a y~!fr, or until the offender reaches
· The 63-year-old movie actor, who won an Academy Award for the
debated in the two houses siqce last yo'l"gster only to see the youth get in 21, depending on the felony. ,
film "Stalsg 17" and starred recenUy in "Network" and
April, came Tuesday as the House · trouble again - would have had con,
However,
first
lime
"S.O.B.,'' waa found In a pool Of blood beside his bed Monday. He had
concurred ~ in extefl8ive Senate trol over. aftercare, or post release misdemeanants no longer would he
or five days, Noguchi said. .
committed to the state, and instead
. amendments.
programs.
.
.Ill~@~ thai ,l!olden iriPPI!d or sUpped on .
· Rhodes ill eXpected to slgri. ,the " The comlhission bitterly opposed wOUld l&gt;e ·placed into eligible schqol,
IIJrow rug, bit the sharp comer of a night table and bl!gan
propoaal as a result of extensive the idea of surrendering that forestry or other local rehabilitation
bleedlniheavUy from a 211-inch cut on the righ' side of his forehead.
negotiations that led to a com- prerogative, as well as control over programs.
Noguchi said bloodstains were found on Holden's bed, along with
promise between the two major (ac- some state subsidies which would
The bill . eliminates the existing
eight to 10 bloodied tlsaues, indicatlna that Holden lay down and tried
three-member youth co11lll)ission
Uons affected - the youth com· have gone with it.
lo stem the now of blood. The coroner estimated that Holden was conscllllill for five to 10 minutes after falling, and during those few minuteS
he apparenUy rolled over and fell off the bed.
He died within a half-hour, Noguchi said.

S.A.E. AND
METRIC
SIZE
SOCKETS
IN METAL
CARRYING CASE

g;

•

~gislature

DRIVE

~

"But we cannot reduce anns

unllateraUy, Success can only come
if the Soviet Union will share our

Commitment; if It will demOnstrate
that Its often-repeated prafeeslons 91
concem for peace will be matched
by poe!Uve action."
Even before ReaPn's speich,
some U.S. officials predicted
privately that the offer I'OIIId be
reJectied by the Soviela. A :d Rep.
Samuel S. Stratton, R-N.Y., c~
man of the Houae Armed Servlcee
subcommittee on mllitary nuclear .
systems, dismiSSed it as "a
propsganda ploy" to put the Soviets
on the defensive In European theater
nuclear force negotiations beglnnlna
Nov. 30 In Geneva.
Ail previous arms control
agreements have no more than
limited increases in nuclear
weapons. One U.S. official, asked
why the zero option is even being
propooe&lt;l if the Sovieta are unlikely
to accept it, replied, "To make clear
we are wiUing to go that far."
Continued on page 14

Rhodes ·gets bill revamping Ohio
Youth Commission, juvenile system

.,

\}

at.y

-Brezhnev also has been asked to
send Soviet repN~e~~tatlves to a new
· proposed conference to develop
ways to "reduce the riaka 'If surprise
attacks" by enhancing stability and
security In Europe.
"All of theSe proposals are based
on the same fair-minded principles:
substantial, mllitarily sicnificant
reductions In forces, equal cellinga
for a1mi1ar types of forces, and
adequate provisions for
verifil:ation," the president said In a
prepared speech before the National
PressClub.
·
Said Reagan : •' My adrninistfation, my country and I are
committed to achieving anns reductions agreements based on these
principles. Today I have outlined the
kinds of bold, equitable proposals
which the world expects of us..
,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 18, 1981

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
..
..
..
..
.
.

DARK WALNUT

manldnd."
In a speech that went beyond the
.strategic altuation In Europe,
Reapn alao said:
-He had lnatructed Secretary ct
State Alexander M. H6lg Jr. to
dllcu.ss the tiJnlq of U.S.-&amp;viet
negotiations on atratealc weapons as
soon u poulble ned year. Reagan
said he had lold Soviet President
l.eonld Bmhnev "that we wiU seek
to negotiate substanUal reductions
In nuclear anns wtpch wOUld resul
In leve!a thai are equnl and
verifiable."
-TheSovleiUnionhasbeenasked
to help reduce the levels of con·
· ventional mjlitary forcea In Europe.
"The Soviet Union could make no
more convtncina cOntribution to ·
peace In Europe - and In the world
- than by agreeing to reduce lla conventional forcee .tgnlficantly and
constrain the pote11Ual for sudden
aggression," Reagan said.

I'
c

·~~~~~~~"

. Davis says states can't veto dumps
COLUMBUS - The state of Utah, with some experience ·in
mlsgulded efforts of maJOl' pubUc and private projects, would take a
eonaervaUve view of any plans to bury nuclear waste within Its borderS.
W. Kenneth Dav!s, deputy secretary in the V.S. Department of
EnelJY. says if an appropriate site is found.lor nuclear waste, an In- ·
dlvidilalltate should iiOt beaDowed to turn it down.
·
·
But Utah spokesman Juline Christofferson says the best poaaible
deciaion on such mattera wOUld require, that the state and affected
local governmenta have a major role In the site selection procesa.
.
Continued On page 14
.

Todafs lottery winn~rs
CLEVELAND (AP) ~ '1be winnlnr, number drawn Tuesdey nlgbt\n
the Oliio Lotteey'a dally jaJDe "The Number" was 610. The lottery
reported earnlaga of t&amp;88,211i fl'lllll the W&amp;llering on the dr&amp;wiag. Ear. nmg. came Cll sales of t892,8116, while holden of winning tickets are
.: entiUed loahlret301,86l,lotterY offlctalasald.

.Stale weather forecasts
· Partly cloud¥ tonliht and 1'lluntdly with a chance of lhower~Thur­
aday. LDwl toai8ht ~to' HJcbl t1lurlday In the low 80s. Chance Of
rain 10 percent toniPt and • pereent Tburaday. Winds light and
ftrlable tonlcbt·
.
Ex' HOidoF••

1-Frldaytbl'lqbSUndly: · Scattered

IMnn or -lurrlllll'rldaJ and a ~ If flurriell Saturday.
, IIJ&amp;IIIIn the 0 P'rlda,p, ~ the Ill ..,,.., IIIII MMD~ to fllldo40a
Saltdly. Lotti Ill the llall'rldaJ ~ IIIII In the :a Saturday and

. SuadaJ.

and replaces it with a director ap.
pointed by the governor,
It also requires each juvenile
court and board of county com,
missioners lo prepare "im annual
comprehensive 'plan" · for corn-

munity-based .services and submit it ,,
·to the youth services department for
approval prior to receipt of state
subsidies, which are subatantially
increased.

Rep . Clifford Skeen, O.Akron, who
joined Pottenger in asking the House
to ae&lt;;ept the Senate version, said he
holds high hopes for the bill.
"OUr, system of juvenile justi.ce·
simply has not worked. This bill wiU
protect the kids, it will protect the
citizens, and it will protect the state
of Ohio,'' he said.

All-volunteer system working well--Reagan
WASHINGTON _(.AP) - The aU· · volunteer force, both in tenns of
volunteer military is provina itself quantity and quality."
"the best way" In peacetime, says
Pentagon manpower chief
President Reagan, citing a Pen· Lawrence Korb added that fiscal
tagon report that ail the armed for·. 1981 was the "first time the services
ces mel their recruiting goals in met and exceeded their authorized
fiscal1981.
strenath" since lhe draft ended in
The report, issued Tuesdey, also mid-1973.
showed that rHnlistment rates
·The statements by Reagan and the
were up, teet scores of volunteers In- Defense officials rebutted argumen,
creased dramatically 8nd the per- Is by critics in Congress and
centage of high school graduates elsewhere who have contended the
joining the military was the hlg~ all-volunteer force is a failure and
ever.
that the country should return to the
Defense Secretary Caspar · Wein- peacetime draft.
berger called fiscal 1981, which enThe Carter administration
ded Sept. 30, "one of the best restored peacetime draft
recruiting and re-enlistment years registtation of young men on groun,
since the inception of the all· ds it wouid pennit the draft

machinery to sta.rt producing troops
faster if conscription were resumed

ina war.

When asked whether the report
foreshadowed a Reagan ad·
ministration drive to end peacetime
draft ~gistration, Korb said il js im,
possible to "posit any conclusion" of
that sort.
Reagan said all branches of the ar·
med s~rvices met their recruiting
goals in fiscal 1981, that reenlistment rates and test scores of
recruits were up and that the propor,
tion of high school graduates volunteering was the highest on record.
Reagan and Weinberger at·
tributed the gains to higher pay , in,
creased

enlistment

and

re-

enlistment bonuses, improved
educational benefits and "increased
appreciation and respect" for men
and women in uniform.
Korb noted also that the high level
of unemployment "obviously does
f]ave some impact" oo recruiting
hot said he did not know how much '
After every ser\rice faDed to m_;,t
its. recruiting
goals in fiscal1979 the
.
Situation reversed in fiscal 1980, the ·
last year of the · Carter ad,
ministration.
The Pentagon report indicated the
upward trend has continued during
the Reagan administration's 111'111
year, Congress has voted two hefty
military pay increases, which went
into effect over the past 13 months.

.

Open bids
for project
Bids for additional space for the
welfare department were opened
Tuesdey at the regular meetlna of
the Meiga County Conunissloners.
SubrnltliDII bids were Mulne
Gaskill for space in the old Colwnbla
Gas Co., building at a rental cost r1
saqo per month, and Alfred Roush,
president'of the LaSalle Hotel Corp.,
lor spcae In the building fonnerly
known aa the Martin Restaurant at a
rental cool of •
per month.
Present for the bid openings was
Michael Swisher, welfare director.
Both bids were tabled for addltlonal study.
Meeting with the cormniasioners
was Pbi1 Roberta. county engloeer,
who dlaculled T·178 In Rutland
· TOW1llhip. '1be IIICiMtr will view
the road and report to the commlaslonen at the Nov. :M meeting.
It wu reported Plvinll 01! the new
acceea road and In frcnt Of Veterana
Memori111 HOif''~ &gt;\ il completed.
It II eapec!Pd thai the final gua!d
rail wort and ... ~,. w1IJ be
pleted wllbiD 1111 nat
and
it JallllldpPid lblt the IC.'clu road
will opaa llllllellml durlnaJ the flnt
weak In December.
AltPI1"8 . . - Henry WePa,
... ........ Rlchlrd ,_and Dlvld
Kobllnll, CGIIIIDIIIImwa, Mary
llltlleUer, clerk, IIIII Marthe

cum:

two,....

awuben.

'lllelday. '1be meetiJq Wll called .. u lttempltt . .
tbe deadlock ever 1eled._ Ill tbe Ualled N.U..O
aecretary geaenl. (API I!'Jihto),
-.t

1'

..•

�The Daily sentinei-Pape-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Olllo

WASHINGTON - II was told of ticle, and do not simply read about
the late Diogenes (412-323 B.C.) that the article. What did Mr. Stockman
toward the end of his days he walked say that was so awful? In essence, ·
barefoot through the streets of he disclosed that here in
Athena, holding high a lantern. He Washington, politicians play
was loolttng, so he sold, lor an honest politics. In the name of all the angela
man. He mJSt have found very lew, · and the saints, what games are
for they called him Dlogenes the politicians supposed to play?
Pil1ochle? Tiddlywinks?
Cynic.
As a two-tenn member of the
U the old boy were alive today, I
House
from a rural district in
would be tempted to lead him
Michigan,
Mr. Stockman had
barefoot up the steps of the
acquired
an
elementary knowledge
Executive Office Building and down
of
these
things.
Nevertheless, he
the marble eorridors to the office of
came
to
his
high
office.
last January
Bpdget Director David 'Stockman.
with
an
idealistic
vision
of the .
Hold up your lantern, friend! You've
federal
budget
as
it
ought
to be.
fOund your man.
Plainly,
the
principal
entitlement
Mr. Stockman is going through
hell these days as the consequence of ptograms - Medicare, Medicaid,
an article about him in the Decem- Social Security, fOOd stamps,
her issue of The Atlantic. By his own educational grants, retirement
description, he has been Iaken to the benefits - were out of control.
woodshed by the president. he has Unless these could be capped, in the
become a splendid target for the fashion of gushers in an oil field,
political cartoonlsts. The word there would be no hope of balancing
ar&lt;iund town is that he has "lost his the budget and reducing rates of inflatiou.
credibility."
The budget director held another
The beleaguered budget director
conviction.
Over the long haul, a
wllllooe no credibility among those
healthy
economy
could be restored
who take the time to read tbe whole
only
by
tax
cuts,
especially' for i~of Wjlliam Greider's masterly ar-

Stockman"---------~--J-•mes_-J._.K_U-:-rpatrtc_._h

dustry and for .wealthy individuals,
So.what elae is new? It was doubt- dress. 'It's the same old 'coon, as a , mediate dual aulllldea, heIDI)' lind
that would provide the fresh capital less Impolitic of Oavid Stockman to Vlrginiastatesmanuaedto&amp;ay with himself, humbler ·and wiler,
and incentives on which rising talk so candidly with a feporter. But another ring around Ita tall. '
benefiting froma fresh • eipeel .
productivity woUld depeud.
Through the literary offlcea of Mr.
there was nothing really wrong - . Mr. Stockman is auHerins aU the
Thus Mr. Stockman went to work. and much that was right - in his pangs and bruises of a quarterback Greider, Mr. Stockman has What Mr. Greider's article brilJlan.. · acknowledging that "supply-side wbo has just been sacked, but he is a pub~cly committed lnlth. .In this ·
Uy depicts - and what articles economics" · Ia no more than the tough little fellow and cari pot the ex- politically foggy town.. let Ill hall a
about the article have obscured - is "trlclllHown theory" in a different perience behind him. Aller the 1m- Jantem's beam.
the frenetic pressure chamber In
which the Reagan budget revisions
were developed. Under the calmest
of circumstances, projections of
revenues and outlays are little more
than the casting of entrails or the
reading of tea leaves. The budget
director needed some numbers the
administration could sell. He put
together some plausible figures and
plunged into battle. His tactics had
·to be based on shock aud surprise. It
was a wild time.
Over a period of months, Mr.
Stockman discussed his crusade
with Mr. Greiser. Honest confessioo
led to hooest reporting. Deals had to
be struck: Majority Leader Baker
had to be stroked with the Clinch
River reactor. Congressman Sonny
Montgomery ·could be kept in bar- .
ness through veterans' benefits. Little by little, the budget director shed
his illusions. He watched the special
interests to go to work - Big
Business, Big Oil, Big Sugar. "The
hogs were really feeding. The grfe\1
level, the level of opportuniam, just
got out of control."
S'W).JtlS

,TEN

Pom~ro,,Ohlo

114-lt!-%15&amp;
DEVOO'ED1U 111E INTEREST OF THE MEI~MASON AREA

alb

~m~ I""'T"'L..JL--.,~c·-===­
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publlsber

, · : , PATWHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

A1111Atant Publilber/Coatroller

GeDf!l'al Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
-Nrwa Edilor
•
A MEMBER of Tbe Aa~lated Prn1, lalaod Daily Prell AlaociiiUon and tM
: America a New1paprr Pllbll,lben Al&amp;otillllen.
LE1TERS OF OPlNION •~ weleomtd. They sbou.YI br leu t1u111- .-onll Aoa1. All
lf!~n are 111b~tlo editlllfl: aDd m1111 ~ slped wltll a.ame, ..&amp;cirns •ad telepltoae aumber. No ~~~~:~lped letten: wiU be JNbll•bed. Letten 1bouJd br 111 lood lallltr, -*ii'HIInl
Iaiiie&amp;, DOl ptrso.Utfn.

Dead in .its tracks.

•

The gOOd news is that the price of money is falling, and the bad 'news is
that it is falling because it's not in demand. The economy is almost dead
in its tracks. Ask almost any business person.
·The good news is that falling interest rates may lead to a resumption of
economic growth. The bad news is that the value of the dollar may fall in
international markets, raising the price of U.S. exports.
The gOOd news is that lower mortgage rates should, in theory, allow
more households to qualify for homes. The bad news is that the recession
wtil cost people jobs aud remove them from the market.
The U.S. economy is now at that stage in the cycle wherein the best of
news can produce the worst of consequences, aud there isn't a lot that elm
be done about it, except perhaps to wait and suffer.
Both the administration forecast and a random selection of privatesector opinion show hope for a return to economic growth by spring, with,
the growth intensifying through the summer. .
· Before then, however, comes the snow and ice, both meterologically
and economically, and the president and ordinary folks alike will have to
trudge through the slush and take the bad with the good.
.Lower interest rates supposedly help the stock market. For one thing,
money is transferred to stocks from debt securities as the yield on the latter lalla. For another, lower rates mean lower costs of doing business. In
411; low rates are said to be gOOd for business.
· GOOd, yes, but when? Recession Jowers rates but it also cuts into sal~s.
Aa aales fall compsnies cut prOduction and dismiss workers. They postpone expansion plans, because of inadequate money and lost faith.
.Given such a scenario, will investors be eager to invest? Will they take
a gamble on the future - load up with risk on the assumption that rewards will be big? Or will they wait and see, as seems to be the habit in recent
years? Which will win out, the goods news or the bad?
High rates, along with what are perceived to be high prices, also have
been blamed for the automotive industry's depression. Will lower rates
mean potential buyers return to the market? Or wtil unemployment, the
bad news that accompanies it, prolong tho industry's woes?
The gOOd and the bad. To industrialize, the country needs capital. It
hasn't been easily avilable. At times in recent years Americans have
dropped their savings rate below 5 percent, compared with at least three
Urnes that in Japan, and more than double it in some other nations.
Yes, it looks like a long winter, a winter of discontent, diaarray and
great disappointments, relieved occasionally by a day of wann sun that
produces faint hOpes but a great deal of slush.
Maybe it will be an early spring. .

Today in history
Today is Wedne8day, Nov.IB, the 322nd day of 1981. There are 43 days

remalnln&amp; In the year.

· Today's hlghiJght In history:
On Nov. II, 111'18, more than 900 members Q!,.lllol ,Peoples Temple took
part in a murder-suicide at Jonestown, Guyana.
··
On Ibis date:
In 16211, St. Peter's Basilica in Rome was consecrated by Pope Urban

vm.

•

.GOING UP- Booten CeiUcs' Larry Bird (331 coes up for a buket
'"""r Chleage Bulls' David GreeuwOGd (34),left, 81111 Orludo Woolridge
.(0) dariDg NBA ocllon Tuesday ill CblcagG. 'I'IIe Celtics beat the Bulla, 1895. (AP Luerpllotol . .

Ohio
Sportlight

he
didgame.
not pl8y
except
the
Iowa
Hepoorly
was not
the for
reason
we lost to Iowa. He's a threat
because of his running ability, and

By Geo.rge Strode

AND CCl.WIING ... NINE,

..

The report concludes that "AMPAC's policy has been to contribute
to a candidate only lf requested to o
so by state medical PACs.,"
Elliott · ~ld my associate Tony
Capaccio that she feels more than
qualified for membership on the
commission because of her experience in medical lobbying. "I
have been involved in implementing
election laws since the early 1960s,"
she eXPlained. "I was often consulted bY the FEC staff because of
my expertise."

WHAT'S NEXT? The White House
has accepted Elliott's disclaimer
that her AMPAC background was
not injurious aud will submit her
nomination to the Senate within the
next lew weeks. Democrats won1
fight her appointment if the
Republicans accept their choice to
fill another vacancy.
RETURN TO NORMAL - The
Reagan Administration is preparing
··to resume fUll diplomatic relations
with Bolivia deapite the fact that the
country is still under the control of a
military dictatorship with strong
connections to the cocaine trade.
The new U.S. ambassador to La
Paz has already been selected, according to my sources, and his name
has been submitted to the Bolivians
for approval. He is Edwin Corr, a

To your surprise, however, your

physician merely prescribes aspirin
and a good night's sleep. .Then the
prosecuting attorney tells the thugs
who came at you with a baseball bat
that they can go free if they promise
not to do it again.
The bullies here aren't flesh-andblood vlUains. They are the 22
jurisdictions - states and portions
of states , covered by the Voting
RightsActoflfl65.
The doctor and prosecutor are Attorney General William · French
·.Smith and President Ronald
Reagan.
Physician Smith has writte~ a
· prescription that may harm
minority voting rights more than It
will befp them. And Prosecutor
Reagan is seekin8 to administer a
slap on the wrist rather than
stronger punlshmenl to thole who
continue to dl8criinlnllte at the llallot

the· Rose Bowl," he said.. "The knocking each other off. From top to _
championship is the cake, the Rose · bottom llle Big Ten is still th~ .
Bowl is the icing on the cake."
•
strongest conference."
Michigan, ranked No. j In tile
preseason poll before losing to._rr~~~~~~~~~~·
Wisconsin, currently iS" No. 7. Are
the Wolverines underrated
nationally?
"I don't know," said Bo. "Most
204&lt;:ondo'r St.
teams · have lost tou$h gaines.
Pomeroy, Oh.
There's more balance in the.counPhone: 992-2974
try. There are two ways to climb in ·
NEW WINTER HOURS :
the rankings. One is to avoid inOpen Tues. thru Fri.
juries. Nobody is deep enough to af.
9 AM. Iii 5 P .M .
Sa f. 9 A.M . I ill P .M.
ford injuries. The other is the
schedule. There are scheduJt.l
~GRAVELY
where you can pile up wins. But net
- in the Big Ten, where we 'keep
~

.

GRAVELY lRJCIOR
·SALES &amp; SERVICE·

r'r;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~.
TO .,HE
''0.,1/!!R$
1
Y'
I /Iii
1

~!r\~~:~e::;~ accurately than

Of ORANGE TOWNSHIP:

Despite the early adversity of two
conference losses, Schembechler' is
very pleased with his Wolverines
"forthewaywehunginthere.lnthe
middle of the season it didil't look
like we'd be in the race. The team
showedalotcharacter."
·"Now, if we win Saturday, it will

THANK YOU
.
fOR YOUR SUPPORT

"j

I;

FAYE WATSON

Berea at Rio for
rematch tonight ·
.

l

:

box.

stitutional Rights heard more than before the Civil and Constitutional
The 15th Amendment has for- .100 witnesses testify in Washington, . Rights Subconunittee has &lt;lemon- ·
bidden racial discrimination in Alabama aud Texas thatthe act was strated clearly that the Voting
voting for more thari a century. But still needed, that racial and Rights Act is all that prevents
from the time that amendment was ianguuge discrimination continued, renewed efforts to nullify minority'·
ratified in 1870 to the time the Voting that federal protection at the ballot voting strength in many jurisdic- ',
Rights Act became law in 1965, the box was still required.
lions.
•
promise of free access to the ballot
In October, the ~ouse voted 389-24
In September, the Lawyer's Combox reljlained unlulfilled.
to extend the act. Now the measure 1nittee for Civil Rights released a '
The act was extended fpr five
is lacing strong opposition in the report documenting· 18 years of
years in !970, and for seven years Senate.
discriminatory political activity '
more in 1975. The 1975 extension adThe House bill, extends the en- aimed at diluting black vole8 in •
ded protections for language forcement provisions of the act until Mississippi. The report noted that ·
minorities.
1984. For the first time, the bill mo5t of. the '17 objections .to
Perhaps the most contrOYersial allows states aud counties with gOOd discriminatory state laws had been
section of the act is its so-called non-discrimination records to filed since 1975 rather than in the
''pre-clearance'' provision. That
escape the pre-clearance distant,less~niightened past.
requires nine slates (Alabama,
requirement.
In late October, a City Council ·
Georgia, . Louisiana, Miasiasippi,
Now Reagan and Smith have redistricting plan for supposedly •
South Carolina, Virginia, Alaska,
decided that ~xtension of the act is liberal New York City was over- :
Texas aud Arizona) and parts of 13 needed - but not In the form ap- turned by Smith's Juatlce Departoth~rs to delay enforcing any elecproved by the House. They have eD- ment, which charged that the '
trical changes until the U.S. at- dorsed an easier bail-out standard. proposal "would lead to a
torney general or the U.S. District And they have opposed the Houae- rtrogressioo in the position of rjlcial
Court for the District of Colwribia
passed provision permitting minorities." ·
. _
rules that they are not
Discrimination at the ballot box
minorities to prove mere
discriminatory in purpose or effect.
discriminatory effect rather than in- won't disappear if the pi'Ohlbii!C)OII' '
Last April, Sen. Charles Mathiaa,
tent when challenging electoral agailill it are relaxed. Reagan ouglt
R-Md., and Rep. Peter Rodino, 0. , procedures; it is easier to prove that to treat those wbo diJcriminate
N.J., introduced the latest menalon
process has ' a dlacrlmJnatory against minority · voters as fOJrtb:
legislation.
result than to prove that Its authors rightly as he did the PATCO,
In May, June and July, the House deliberately sought to dlscminate.
strikers: When the law is broken, a
Subcommittee on Civil and ConA swruner's worth of leltlmony price llllllll be paid.

a

'

Ftve yean ago: Twenty-aeven people were aeculecl In Etblopla lor
lllJeced plotllllinlt the 1-year-old military repne.
Oae yeer ago: In his first vWt tAl Capitol HID since his elecUon,
Pln'tdclect Relpn won pledgee of IUIJI)OI't lnm a- and Senate
lllk'lalbolbJ*1jel.
'l'odiJ'IIIailldly: RepabllcanSen. Ted san- of AJutallll.
'fhanlbl For Todly: Cclnlclence II the Inner voice thet warns 111
•••w.odymay belooldng.- KL. Mencken,IJ.S. critic (1-.JIIlJI).

•

.'

t.'

l

CERTIFIED
w.

.

front line by 6-7 freshman Dan Curry
of Derby, who is hitting for 17 P.Oints
per outing while hauling down 2
caroms Jier clash. '!;he other forward
slot will be filled by IHi senior cocaptain Watson McDonald of
Warren, who is averaging 13 points
and 10 rebounds per outing.
The backcourt will be made up of
!HI Jerry Mowery of Williamsport
. and 6-2 Vince Wollenburg · of
Newark. Mowery is a freshman and
Wollenburg a sophomore. ·
Expected to see plenty of action·
are ~ guard Scott Burson of
Athens, Bob Shaw of Wheelersburg,
~ Tom Jutze of Cincinnati, 6-0 Rick
Penrod of Glouster, and 6-3 Richar- ·
do Hairston of Columbus.
Berea is expected to start a front
line of 6-3 Vance Blade, 6-4 Mark
Walls and 11-li Keith Riley, while 6-I
Donald Hairston aud 6-1 . Tommy
Owsley will get' the starting nOd in
the backcourt. Blade connectel f.or
13 points aud 14 rebounds, Hairston
15 points and Owsley 'J:/ markers in
Saturday night's contest with the
Redmen.
David Moeves (6-li), Bob Fletcher
(11-li), and John Clarke (11-li) are expected to see action in a reserve
role.
Berea, 0-1, is coached by Roland
Wierwllle.

And In 1t'IG, China IIIJlled an ambauador to the Sovillt J,Jnlon, rea10rtng
top-level diplomatic relaU0111for first Ume in IGUr years.
Ten yean ago: Communlal China tested its 12th nuclear bomb in seven

~

..

l

former assistant secretary ol state
for international narcotics matters.
Bolivia is the · most coup-prone
country in the world: There have
been upwards of 200 COUJ&gt;B, attempted coups, and counter-coups
since Simon Bolivar defeated the
Spanish in 1825.
Just a few days before the free
eleetions were scheduled In July
1980, another uprising - known as
the "cocaine coup" - brought to
power the corrupt General Garoia
Meza. President Jirruny Carter '
withdrew the American ambassador ·
and cut off almost all U.S. mllltary
and economic aid. International lending authorities curtailed credit to
Bolivia.
There were several unsuccessful
coup atiempts thereafter and Gen.
Garcia Meza was finally replaced by
Gen. Celso Torrelio VIlla last
August. Torrelio is thought to he untainted by the drug trade, but .
diplomatic sources say he Is little
morethan front man for the seamy .
Bolivian businessmenand generals
who run the $1 billion cocaine trade. .
One of them allegedly Ia Col. "Freddy" Qqiroga, head of BoUvia's ·
brutal security force.
State Department officials believe .
that progress is being made toward ·
stamping out the cocaine traffic.

.nmeut In Speln.

'

.

•

I

In 11103, the Unitad States and Panama signed a treaty granting the U.S.
rigbta to buUd the Panama Canal.
In 111111, Gennany and Italy recOgnized Gen. Frandlco Franco's gover-

yearw.

on his way to a game-high 33 points. ·
Center BiD Cartwright led New
York with 31 points.
.,
Spurs II!, Maverlcto 115
•
Mark Olberding scored eight o(
San Antonio's final 10 points and .
teammate George Gervin had a
game-high 38. The Mavericks pulled
within two points, !05-UXI, with 2:30
left, but failed to score ,on their next ·~
five posaessions. Rookies Mark ·
Aguirre and Rolando Blackman' ~·
combined for &lt;14 points lor Dallas. ·

l
a greatfor
year.
we are again,
abechance
the Here
championship
and L~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~P~d~.~P~o~l~.~A:d~.~ 1l

A slap on the wrist won't do'-&amp;-__Jui_u._n_&amp;_n_d
. hnagine that a gang of bullies
breaks your leg.
You know . you're in ror a long
period of convalescence in an uncomfortable cast. But the pain is
eased by your knowledge of the
punishment that wlU prevent your
assailants from a!tacking anyone
else soon.
'·

.

W.Ue the gatll&lt;l llllght not run to .
lonn of previous years, Michigan's
develoPment is slmllal' to last year,
whentheWolftrinesgotolftoaslow
start and then came on strGng to win
thecbaJJ;IPlonslllpUdRoaeBowl.
"HI had to do it over again, our
approach to the season would be different," &amp;aid Scllembechler. "We
took lt easy ill preparing for the
se88DIIbecausewehadalackofdepthand wanted toavG.id illjw1es."
He ai!Johoped the team would play
well early aud win while sophoinore
quarterback Steve· Smith had a
chance to develop.
"He has talent, that's why he has
improved so much," said Bo. "But

Political·action committee woman
_ _o_n
nominated to COIDIDiSSiOD.____Ja_ck_A_nders
WASHJNGTON- One of the most state were doUbling that amount by
nettlesome undergrowlhs in kicking ln an additional $5,000 to
American politics is the · their coogressiooal favorites. A conproliferation of polltical action com- fidential Aug. I, 1979, report, buried
mittees, which contribute funds to in commission files, discloses that in
candidates and make them beholden the 1976 and 1978 elections, the
to a multitude of special interests.
national and state contributions joinThe Federal Election Corrunission
tly exceeded the $5,800 limit on 206
is struggling to police the mushoccasions. Thanks to this suJ&gt;.
rooming PACs and their lavish slush
terfu~e. more than $615,000 was
funds. President Reagan, meanpumped into campaigns to CUI'JY
while, is on the verge of nominating
favor with AMA candidates.
as a member of the embattled comElliott was questione&lt;J ' during
mission a woman who has served
depositions about the cozy arrangewith one of the more blatant lobby ment between the AMA and the state
operations - AMPAC, the political
medical S&lt;lCieti~. A report by the
arm of the American Medical FEC's general counsel disputed
Association.
some of her bland disavowals of
wrongdoing.
She is Lee Ann Elliot of Skokie,
,She insisted tl\at consultations be. Ill., who once was associate
executive director of the powerful
tween the national and state
medical lobby. Iudeed, she was
organizations on donating to cansharply interrogated during an FEC
didates were "infrequent." Elliott
investigaiion of AMPAC.
testified ''we have some activities in
Unpublished documents from the
which we join. We. do not have a
depositions indi~ate she may have
comprehensive and equivalent
.
misled the commission on the ·program.n
possibility that the doctors' political
The general .counsel's report
action committee was in unlawful disagr~ in these words: "Such
cahoots with state medical groups.
statements should not be given great
Under federal law, AMPAC was weight. Not .only are they selllimited to a $5,000 contribution per serving and undocumentable, they
congressional candid&amp;te.
also run counter to the cirBut FEC probers discovered that cumstantial evidence we otherwise
medical societies in virtually every
have obtained."

game losing ,streak in the fifth game 105; the Milwaukee Bucks beat the
of a brutal sev~ road trip Washingtoo Bullets~; the Boston
with a 124-110 victory over the New Celtics defeated the Chicago Bulls
YorkKnlcb.
91Hi5 and the Houston Rockets beat
Last week, Kansaa City Coach Cot- the Indiana ·Pacers !OW2.
ton FltzslnimOrUI traded last year's
If their performance against the
startin8 center, Sam Lacey, to the Knicks is an accurate indication the
Nets for Mike WoodBon, now the j{ings, 3-6, wtil be a good ~am
Ki.ngB atarting lhooUng guard, and a before the season is over. Forward
1!182 No.I draft pick.
, Reggie King, who really came
In otl)er NBA games Tuesday around in last year's playoffs, hit 15
night, the Sa'1 Antonio Spurs of 22 shots against New York - 3-6
defeated the Dallas Mavericks 112- with a three-game losing streak -

Nothing has gone according to script--Bo

--~'----

Ill Court Sbftt

'•

By GARY MYERS
AP Sport. Writer
Take an 0111 Blnllon&amp; and Scott
Wedman away liun any team and
the reaults would be predict.ible and poor.
· The KanSas City Kings, perhB)lll
the hardest hit of any National
·Basketball Auoclation club since
free agency wulnstitutad five years
ago, have been experiencing the
post.()tis and Scott blahs.
. Tuesday nliht. they brote a four-

Wednesday, November 11, Jtll ·

Diogenes and David

The Daily Sentinel

KC Kings end losing spell, 124-110 ~~=

Pege-2-The Dally 5enflnll

.

538
Main
Pomeroy, OH .

''

l
•

y

'

ULL

SERVICE ~,. ~"~'~

HI-OCTANE REGUI,AR 11.29'
SUPER NO-LEAD 11.31'

~t.~ \)\\. ~~t
~._'\\Jc~

ALSO AVAILABLE

CHEWING

• TOBACCO
Reg. $5.95
100'$ $6.05

Pepsi, Diet Pepsi
Mountain Dew,
7-Up, Coke

AND
SNUFF

65~

$119
Plus tax &amp; deposit

RC, RC 100,
DIET RITE, UPPER 10
Cans Also Available: $1.69 to $1.99

HOURS:

MON.-SAT : 6A.M.-9 P .M .
OPEN SUN. 8 A.M.-9 P.M.

•

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 11, lfl1

Pomeroy-Millclleport, Ohio

'

'

.

By Major Amos B. Hoople
game, and the unstoppable MarPeerleu Progaosdealor
cus Allen wiQ be too much for
Egad, friends, here we are once
UCLA ·and their talented passer,
again at what I - kaff-kaff Tom Ramsey. The Trojans 37-28
have dubbed "Traditional Saturvictory will run their record
day!" That day which sends unagainst UCLA to 30-1~.
dergrads and old grads into a
MissiSsippi State has been enfreilzy as their favorite teams
joying one of their better years.
battle it out with old foes on the
For Ole Miss it has been just S()gridiron. Um-k~pb!
so. Look for the Bulldogs of State
Consider, if you will, these
to add to their lllurels as they win,
20-i.
.
classics: Yale hosting Harvard
(98th meeting); Ohio State at
In the interstate battles in
Michigan (78th); Oklahoma enOregon and Washington, the
tertaining Nebraska (62nd);
Hoople scouts see the Oregon
UCLA vs. Southern California
State Beavers chewing their way
(51st); Mississippi vs. Mississip- heh-heh - to a close 1().7 vicpi State (78th); Kentucky hosting
tory over Oregon's Ducks, and
Tennessee (77th); Oregon and ·
'·
the Washington Huskies out-Oregon State (85th); Washington
pointing Washington State'"
it'll be a great day for my- haklind Washington State (74th); and
Cougars in another thriller, 2+20.
kaff - alma' mater as the Elis
Purdue at Indiana (84th).
Purdue, a winner over Notre
hang it on John Harvard's boys to
And how about these pairings:
Dame, can claim the state chamthe tune of 23-22. Boola-Boola!
Texas vs. Baylor (71sl renewal);
pionship of Indiana as they knock
Cosch Carmen Cozza has put
nexkloor neighbors Duke and
off the Indiana Fightin' Hoosiers,
together one of the finest teams in
North CaroUna (67th); Texas
3a-21. Watch for Purdue's Scott
Yale history, and in tailback Rich
A&amp;M vs. TCU (77th); Stanford at
eaiDpbell, the nation's leading
Diana and QB John Rogan has
home to California (84th); and
passer, to have another fine afdeveloped two of the best players
Missouri visiting Kansas (90th).
in the storied Ivy League - and, . ternoon.
Jove! There'll be- kaff-kaffThe Baylor Bears don't appear
indeed, in the nation!
some glad Urnes and some sad
to have enough to stop the Texas
Jumping to the Midwest, we
times come sundown this SaturLonghorns. So we look for Texas
land smack in the middle of the
day. Har-rumph !
•
to continue to march toward a
famed Ohio State-Michigan
First, let's lake a look at a few
Cotton Bowl Bid - with a 20-17
rivalry. It started way back in
other qlg games.
triumph.
1897 when the Wolverines topped
Notre Dame's Fighting Irish
North Carolina and Duke will
the Ohio Stale entry 36-0.Jn the 77
have only two weeks left to
stage
their usual backyard
contests to date, Michigan has
salvage the 1981 season and to
brawl,
with the Tar Heels
won 43, Ohio State :W, and five
snare a bowl bid. Word from our
emerging
victorious over Duke's
times they've wound up tied. In
South Bend correspondenL'l is
Blue
Devils.
We see it North
one of their typical cliff-hangers
that the Irish have mastered
Carolina
26,
Duke
24.
we see Bo Schembechler's
Gerry Faust's system. They're
Texas
A&amp;M
rates
the Hoople
Michigan squad taking a narrow
prepared to put the stopper on
nod
to
top
TCU,
33-21,
and the
24-21 triumph, but not before Ohio
Curt Warner and his Penn State
same
nod
goes
to
Stanford
to slip
State's Art Schlichter's aerial
teammates. Notre Dame, 31-27.
past
California,
23-21.
The
wizardry drives them cr~zy. HehMeanwhile, Pitt, looking ahead
Missouri-Kansas
donnybrook
will
heh!
to iL'l annual showdown with Penn
be just that, with 'Missouri's
State next week, will warm up by
Just as close and just as good
Tigers finishing nn the long end of
trampling Temple, 42-12.
football will be on lap in Norman,
a21-18count!
.
The Hoople Upset Special of the
Okla. The visiting Nebraska
Other worthy rnatch-ups you'll
Weeks is: the Gamecocks of
Cornhuskers will rui'n the
want to watch: the J\rkansasSouth Carolina to turn back the
Oklahoma Sooners' homecoming. · . SMU fray in the SWC and the
ClenlSon Tigers, 2().18. Jim
The Cornhuskers will squeak by
BYU-Utah contest in the Western
Carlen's South Caroyna crew
with a 30-24 victory. The
Atl))etic Conference.
seems to get up for the big ones.
Nebraska defense will spell the
In a down-t()-the-wire affair, we
Har-rumph!
difference.
· peg the Mustangs of SMu to edge
Going back to the top for THE
Southern California's vaunted
Arkansas, 22-21.
GAME - Yale vs. Harvard offense, averaging 423 yards per
In a wild-and-woolly mixup, we

Name
Schmidt MVP
-

PIDLADELPHIA (AP) - Mike · nie Banks of the Chicago Cubs in
Schmidt said he didn't feel any extra
~• =
dJ 'M
fC' · t'1
satisfaction in becoming only the l,;,IN"'V'.,-an oe organo lDClMa
in 1975-76.
third National League player ever to
''As far as the number of guys, the
win consecutive Most Valuable number O.f people who have won 1't
;
Player awards.
back-t()-back, or the number of
.
"Extra satisfaction? Not really," times I'm really not concerned with
the Philadelphia Phillies Utird 'hat . ht 0 ! kno th
•
ng n w.
w ere are
baseman said Tuesday, shortly after
he was notified that the Baseball eluded a1ong wi
organ an
good
namesth,
andM to be in-d
Writers Association of America had some
Banks ...
is quite
an honor."
voted him NL MVP.
Schmidt was an overwhelming
· "I don't know how you can choice in the balloting by two writers
measure satisfaction. l'ni about as from each National League city. He
satisfied as I possibly can be, is only the eighth to accomplish the
whatever the numbers are, second consecutive double since the voting
time, third time, first time. AD MVP began in 1931.
award iS someUting that dam lew
Schmidt, who was a unanimous
people ever get the chance to en- choice in 1980, the year he also won
joy," Schmidt said at a news con- the · World Series MVP honor,
ference.
received 21 of a possible 24 first
The only other consecutive win- place votes, and 321 points trom the
ners of the NL MVP award were Er- panel.

CHRISTMAS

CLUB

SCHMIDT
MVP
•
Pblladelphla Pbillles Mike Schmidt, above, has been named the
!'iational League's M..t Valuable
Player by the Baseball Wrlten
Associ• lion of America. ( AP
Laserphoto).

has r.tec1 In the BclltoD College
point-llhavlng trial following
testimony from the sdlool'a buketball coach that he fGUnd nOthing in
the behavolr of his 11171-71 squad to
make him suspect them of rigging
the games.
Summations by · government
prosecutor Edward McDonald and
four defense attorneys were
scheduled today before the jury of
eight women and four men.
After hearing from coach Tom
Davis and several others Tuesday,
the defense rested its case and U.S.
District Judge Henry Bramwell
refected motions for dismissal of
charges that former BC basketball
player Rick Kuhn and four others
conspired to shave points in games
that season.
Charged with racketeering conspiracy and bribery are former BC
player Rick Kuhn; brothers Anthony
and Rocco Perla ancl Paul Mazzei all of the Pittsburgh area - and
James Burke of New York. If convicted, defendants face a maximum

Saturday. Nov. 21
Arizona 25 Fresno St. 14
A.rizbna St. 42 Colorado St. 20
Appalachian 51._ 21 W. Carolina 14

Boise St. 331daho12 .
BYU49 Utah42

Cent. Michigan 24 BoWiint Green
Colorado 28 k ansu St. 19
Columbia I Brown 7
Dartmouth 15 PeniiJ 10

oela,ware l8 w. Chester 21
Drake35 Nebraska-Omaha 14
E. Ke.nlucky 35Morehead St. 14
Furman 26 Cltadel20
(frambliAg 21 Soutt)ern U 15
Haw4ii 30 Pacific 17

. Houston 27 Texas Tech 6
Idaho St. 21 Weber St. 13
ltlinols42 Northwestern 14

Illinois St. 36 Ball St. 24
Iowa 21 Michigan St. 20
Iowa St. 28 Oklahoma St. 24
Lehigh 35 Lafayette 21
Maryland 38 Virginia 13
McNeese St. 42 SW Louisiana 2'0
Miami (Fla.) 34 N. Carotil)s St. 28
Miami !Ohio) 17 Cincinnati 14
Michigan 2~ Ohio State 21
Montana 18 E. Washington 141
Mississippi St. 20 Mississippi 6
Missouri·21 Kansas 18
Nebraska 30 Oklahoma 24
Nevada Las~ Vegas 33 Air Force 22
N. carolina 26 Duke 24
Ohio University 32 Kent St. 25
Orcgo-. st. 10 Oregon 7 ·
Pitt42Temple 12
Princeton 21 Cornell13
Purdue 35 ln,:liana 21
Rutgeers 31 Boston College 17
Richmond 17 William &amp; Mary 14
· San Diego St. 36 UTEP 14
San Jose St. 30 Long Beach St. 20
Southern Cal. 37 UCLA 28
s. Carolina 20 Clemson 18
SMU M Arkansas 21
s. Mississippi 14 LoulsvilllO
Stanford 28 California 21
Texas 28 Baylor 17
Texas A&amp;M TCU 21
Tennessee 24 Kentucky 10

In
D ' l l l f - If M U pi
Edueatlon Week, Nw. 11-11,
teat+-n at !be 1i11ip CAaaiWi&amp;J
School .., '-WI by lbe . . .
of Drew Wellater Pc11t •. l'lbla

' ll)'eal'!llftpriiOO.
The . govemment dlaqJea the

defendaJ1II c:oospJnd to lis 1he au&amp;ao their bettinC ayndiCIIIe c:GUid 1?-t
boOkies' oddil ml LGGp&amp; r Inc
players could make maney. Ka
was allegedly d $2,5111 per pme
flsed,
Davis, a basketball C98ch for 110
years the last four at BC, said he
noli~ nothing odd In 1111 ~··
play as t1ie season unfolded, but did
t;evlew the year throagh vi~
' p
.
a•t

Several memben of Meigs County
Salon710, Eight ml Forty, attended
the homecoming celebration far
Lucille Woodling, Depar1meata1
Chapeau of Ohio, held at Grand
Rapids, Ohio. Going from here _..
Pearl Knapp, Eunle Brinll:w, Mlly
Martin, ml Rhoda Jl•..VU They
were joined by Bessie Mlldlell of
Columbus, and the group 'ftn _ .
night guests at the horne of Mn.

MIDDLEPORT
992-2342

: t

~

p

_.,, "'"

.......

~

PRICES GOOD THRU NOV•.21. 1981

}

'

''

Attending were Mr. end Mn. Roy
Test and aon, Michael Tnt, Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Glbbl, Mr. and Mn!. Vernoq Grinstead, Mr. andMnl. Russell
Barton, Mr. and Mn. Ray Preffltl,
Mrs. Earl Incell. llln. Joyce c.son. Mnl. Lucille s~. Mr.
and Mrs. r..wrence Belcher.

19th.
'

==~~

,ou

11 behooves
this c""'mo
y - to be(ome 1"... _
with
clubs or large orpnlzatlona. The

HEARING TEsTs SET

Washington 24 Washington St. 20
W. Michigan 36 E. Michigan 12
W. Texas St. 28 New Mexico St. 14
W. Virginia 21 Syracuse 20
Wisconsin .24 Minnesota 14
Wyoming 40 New Mexico 14
Yale 28 Harvard 22 ·

FOR POMEROY, OHIO

THURSDAY, NOV. 19

ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS
.WILL BE GIVEN BY

9 A.M. 10 12 NOON

pouibllities for m.kinu rMflV
vatuable corlteacts look ex.·
ceptlonaliy good.

SCORPIO (Oct. 2A-Nov. 22) In
situations where you hold
authority over others you conduct
yourself very well today. You
make them feel as If they were
friends rather than underlings.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21l Stand up and bo counted
today if you feel you've been
pushed in the background lolety
in • sptefflc Involvement. Your

be"-"·

· MR. H. W. MATTINGLY

results

pt..:e is out an 111e
not behind a felice.
CAP'RICORN (Dec. 22-Jao. n1
Your vision and enthusiasm are
easily aroused today, especially
If you are arou~ hopeful,

My

Small Time cau•ht Myron Boy at the
""
wireandsurvi'fiedafoulclairntowin

BEL TONE Consul1anl WhoWili Be At:
ME1GSINN- POMEROY, OHIO

~tive

people. Seek such ,com·
pafty. Their fervor lscont,.glous.

Anyone who ha:; trouble nearinQ is welcome to have a hearing test
using modern electronic equipment to determine if his loss is one
which may ~helped . Some of the causes of hearing loss will be ex·

the$900 feat~ mile pace Tuesday
night at Lebanon in2:07.
Stewards disallowedthe cIa'un and
th .
'd••
••
nd ..
e WUUJer pal ~·80, ~·80 a .,...60 •
Myron Boy returned 3.20 and $2.60,
while Dolly Burr was third, paying

fryer Parts·················· 4,

November 19, ltll ·

FREE

Vanderbilt 24 Tenn·Chattanooga 7

MIXED

Astrograph

jlQUARIUS (Jon. 211-Fob. 19.)11

vou're an unattached Aquarlan,

plained and diagrams of how the ear works will be shown.
We Also Service and Repair All Makes ot Hearing Aids.
Batteries And Supplies For All Makes For Sille~
IF YOU CANNOT COME IN CALL THE HOTEL FOR
A HOME
APPOINTMENT .
PHONE
992·3&amp;29

thl' could be an lnterestlnv day

for you romantlca~ly when you
discover someone to whom
voU've been secretly a"racted

likes you asweli .
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marth 21)'
Your gilt lor ge"lng others 1o
cooperate is your main stock ln
trede 1odoy. Everyone will. know
that thoy'li be dealt with fairlY.
ARIES !March 21·Aprll 19)

r~$3;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;
CORRECTION TO SUNDAY, 'NOVEMBER 15

SW.IFT BUTTERBALL

:·

~

16-24 LB.

Turkeys ·······················
USDA CHOICE BONELESS

% Pork Loin ..........J.}31B9

LB.

$}89

.

Chuck Roast·············

LB. ·

QUALITY PLUS
'

llfieners

12 OZ. PKG.

••••••••••••••••••••••

some lnterestino conditions may
begin 1o stir as of today regarding

improved working conditions. It
also bond YOU closer to one In
your field.
T.AURUS (April 211-Moy 20)
Youngsters can be more easily
managed today If you use a ll"le
s~.K~ar coating on
your com·
mancls. Be masterful, bllt smile
willie doing so.
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) This
Is the day to Implement a change
tttet could Improve home har·
mony. It has been discussed long
enough .and the time for action

will

I'

DON'T LOOK
ANY FURTHER
FOR YOUR

has come.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Be
assertive today If there's
sOmeone of the opposite sex
you1 ve met recently and would
like to get to know be"er. This
p4rson will be pleased you're In·
terested.
·
LEO (July 2J·AU9. 22) There
are two situations that . tOOk
prOfitably promising tor you at
this time. You know what they
are. Take some positive action on
them today.
VIRGO (Aut. 23·Sept. 2J) Your
mettle has been tested In the fires
of life and you are aware thlt vou
hove definite leadership
qualities. use 1hem ,to your ad-

Idaho Potatoes~~t.~l 89

more

BLUE BONNET . _·
LB.

vantage todav.

The

WITH ADDmONAL '10.00

FRESHLIKE

14

PHILADELPHIA

oz. CAN

VegetableS·······

'

', .. ~sure' the Turkey you buy
has the Grand A Seal with no
bruises or parts ~issing."

....

;

,,

You'll be whistling a happy
tune when you reap the benefits C'lf your Christmas Club

.

'l'hanlr88iving seeian.

GRANDPt\ SEZ,

Ho-Ho-Ho Back Into
Christmas for You ...

""
.,..

historic Lewla home 011 . , _ St.,
with 11 pei'80ill ett a t!'C. 11le
diJinc tables were -....ted for the

On November 19. wt'd like you to stop smoking
cigarettes for 24 hours. ll's worth a try. Because if VOU,
can skip cigareht'S for a day, you might dtscover you
,can skip 'ein forever.

'

·

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

Soci~~i~=-~
IlinDol' on Saturday 1\11111111 at the

'N OVEMBER

SELF liASTING
TIMER

~ Will Put the

'·'

Holiday dinner held

WE HAVE '·EM
GRADE A ~"

orOSUin
Liberty bowl

Sundiy Ul_am-10 pm

Alva Niceley.

SKIP

Virginia Tech 21 VMI17

LEBANON, · Ohio (AP)

Mon.-Sat. 8 am·lO pm

Homecoming
celebration

AVE.

•••·
'
''..
'

STORE HOURS:

man.

DOWNIN&amp;OtiLDS
IJfSURMCE
·AGENCY
~nd

,.

Willa ml Jennlf.- .......... ..,_.
ted ~teacher wldla 1lql Nd liP'
pie. Each ltudent wu allo . . - ted ID apple by the children amsted
by Annll Willi, Betty M•nlri'W, IJ1d
Veda Davb, junior activity chair-

come of Eagles' pm~~·u.t 1 1 m

115 N.

,.
•
'
''
''

• I'

Toledo 40 N. Illinois 15
Tulsa 35 Arkansas St. 22

Leba~on

Teachers honored

Thanksgiving Turkey·

'82

Navy will
play Iowa

MEMPIDS, Tenn. (AP) - Navy
will become the first service
academy to play in the Uberty Bowl
on Dec. 30 - against either Iowa or
Ohio State, published reports say.
The city's major newspapers, The
Commercial Appeal and The Press
Scimitar, reported in editions
published today and Tuesday that
Navy has agreed to play in the 23rd
Uberty Bowl.
Navy, 7.-J, completes its regular
season Dec. 5 in a . nationally
televised game against AnDy in
Philadelphia. Iowa and Ohio State
are each 7.-J with one regular seaaon
game left.
The Liberty Bowl's founder and
executive director A.F. 'Bud'
Dueller has sought a service
academy for the bowl for seve'ral
yean because of the Uberty Bowl's
palrlotlam theme.

NEw YORK (APl- The defense

look for the strong right arm of
Jim McMahon to propel BYU
past the strong Utah Utes, 4$-42,
(BYU boasts a 400-yarda-per
game offense lind' Utah Ia only a
step behind at 425 yards per contest.)
Now go on with my forecast:

21

~-

Defense rests case in
point-shaving trial

Peerless prognosticator likes
Michigan over Ohio State, 24-21
'

..

••

I•

VAUGHAN'S

Dolfr , ·.- ....................... II C..

Cardina-l

'
I
I

MA-111

Umlt One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Nov. 21. 1911

'i

We IHtvre U.S.D.A. Choice 8eef
Food Stamps Welcome

·'

I

~

nt..ll eoo1 whip·················· 9
89

GOLD MIDAL

...

••

•

...

..'
'

-

FLOUR
5LlBAG

89~

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Nov. 21, 1981

PUMPKIN
29

oz. CAN

010t7

49
· ~·

Limit one Per customer
Good Only at Powell's ·
Nov.

. .-

FLAVORITE

LIBBY'S

Offer

J'
J
•

f

CRISCO
SHOmNING

J: .• , ..

•'

Hand in Hand

8 oz. BOWL

' "

.J

I

Where Friendahip
and S.vi"'l" Go

•'

INJU .....

J'

Locust and Pearl Stteet
Middleport, Ohio .

Cheer Deter

BIRDS EYE

8 oz.

·.'·

COFFEE

'

' •
' •

1 LB.CA~ . , • •
Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's

.

-

. ..

2

I

..

\

21~,!19~8!1!~~~=0=ff:e:r!E:x;p:ir:e!s:N=o~v=.;21:';1:98=1~ ~ .-'
''

�. Buy Oassified M

Mary Shrine meets
·l&gt;lua lor a cesemonilll to be held
od: Dec. 11 at ap.m. ......., made at a
..... llll8tinll ol Muy Slvlne 11,
&lt;Her ol the White Shrine ol
JIIWBiem, held at the Pomeroy

THIS CHRISTMAS

MillonlcTemple.
Fallowing the ceremonial there
'1ill be a white elephant sale and
pcilluck refrealanento. A practice
wauetforNov. 23at 7:30p.m.
:Margie Cartwright, worthy high
prUilteu, and Donald Yol1o, wat.~ of &amp;bephenls, presided at the
meeting. J\11 invitation was read to
the DIBtrlct 7 official inapectlon by
sejoumer Ruth Hartose, supreme
wOrthy high priestess, to be held on
Nbv. :M at 7:30 p.m. at the Unden
Masonic Temple in Columbua with
NOrth star Shrine 45 as the host

PIICE .
IWTEIIPEOIIL

Pep Up Jbur Step

IIIII "I"
MIIIIMIIII

Yl

(

.

GALE: Here's comfort
n support when you're
on the go. Allractive
etltchlng ind detailing add .
style for this perfect

DIZ

PRICES IOOD
THURS., FRI. I SIT.
IIYEIBER 11-20.21

everyday shoe. .

.

~-

PI ICE

Birth announcement
:roRn.AND - Mr. and Mrs.
L8rry Lehew of Portland are annQunclng the bi)'th of a daughter Ocl
30 at Holzer Medical Center. The Inlaid weighed six pounds and 15 oun·
c&amp; and baa been named Mellasa
~- The mother Is the fonner
Kathy Rizer.
-Grandparenls are Mr. and Mrs.
Marion Rizer, Mason; Mrs. Owen
tf!illey, Syracuse, Qhio, and greatgrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Eber
ROush, Mason.

BUSTER
Ill oblervallee
EdocaUon Week appleo were belllg preseoated to the leacbers at
Pomeroy Elementary and Meigs CoJDIDuoily School, The pregram II
SJIOIIIored by the American Legion, NaUonal Education Alaoelalloa,

SUPPLIES
'i MOVING SOON

A REVIVAL will be held at 7:30
=each evening from Nov. 18
:through Nov. 22 at the Racine
Tlrst Baptist Church. Messages
1rill be presented by the Rev.
(:harles Norris, the Rev. Monty
Sheets, the Rev. Charles Mc:i&gt;!mald and the Rev. Don Walker,
~- There will be special
.niuaic each evening. The public is
:invited.

president, Mrs. Hanlon,

~5-

3973.

MEIGS COUNTY Humane
Society Thursday a( 7:30p.m. at
the Meigs Inn.

OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
of Pomeroy-Middleport Lions

WICI&lt;ER
BASI&lt;ET
SALE

TREATS for the HOME

w , 40''

Choirs
. 6Toblo

SAL£

~--- ....w.:;~

'

"

SLICED

L~

JUMIOTMIU

POSITION IICLINIR
w.• •1 "

H.

Comtortlbl~

BEN

Handsame
. Bentwood

OAK

HALL
TREE

PINE

ROCKER

OR

REG. '29.95

SALE

PGPIRITI
PIPCDRI

FREE

multH»utton pillow

bAck . UphOitttttelln burttriWftt brown vinyl .

IIICU IllES

$2495

YELLOW·WIITE
lOlLI FOOl

CAll Mil

IIICI ·

Our 8-foot Clotho
Rack Ia bolutlfully dnlgned lot
coats, hats and
umbrellas. The
pine· finished

TDPPIII

Tru even swivets
so you can put It
In a corner. For
homt or oftlce

use. Take along
price.

WIHholol
T~lo

extra heavy. extro etlborote
Bentwood rock• Ia fintlhed in
w•lnut and hal a natural CIM

..•

CAU (614)-992·2104
· or (304)-675-1244

oz

oz

'9ft00.

ntiChtlt-

.

7

32

JOlES BOYS

I

Rtl- '1299.00

Chino

YINI ..... IW

Office Hours by ~ppolntment Only

SPECIAL

RECLINER
H. Deep padded seaf and pillow

U"

.•
;: THE POINT PLEASANT
"omen's Aglow Fellowship will

.

BUSTER

Dining Group

1Z TO 14 Ll.
Wlnt AllY Pl/ICHASE
Of 'JtUO 01 MOU

•'

·:

$1 t!

MIX.

NAME IRANDSa
Khroehler, lerkllne,
Franklin

FREE
.TURKEY

liehool PTA will meet at 7 p.m.
'l'huraday with an open house to
beheld.

..

IEIF

RC CILA
RC liD
DIIT RITI CILA

oz

Special

.: mE BRADBURY Elementary

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL AllERGIST

.(

8-18

,...;,.......-::

bac k . Upholstered in durable reusf tweeD
Herculon.

..

.

(

.

'199°

J7.''

:refreslunents.

'

WtO CIRD

S1YU

: RIVERVIEW Garden Club will
liave a Christmas Workshop conducted by Mrs. Gene Wllsoo and
.Mrs. Lyle Balderson Thursday
:evenln~, Nov. 19, at 7:30p.m. at
ihe home of Mrs. Denver Weber.
:pj-ogram corrunlttee will serve

•

18111 BIYS
WHITE BREAD

0

NEW SHIPMENT
JUST ARRIVED

MIDDLEPORT Child Conservation League will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Harold Blackston.
·The program will be on preparing
.for kindergarten.

..

-··

GREAT FOR GIFTS

ilxtiTING WPEij

JOHN A. WADE, M. D., INC.
: VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

SPECIAL

ORDER YOUR
TURKEY TODAY!

STARTING .AT

REVIVAL THROUGH Nov. 22
at Racine First Baptist Church;
various speakers and special
music, 7:30 each evening.

OPEN HOUSE when Bradbury
Elementary School PTA mel.! at
.7 p.m. Thursday at school.

17 POUID
AID DOWI
BLISTER

Justin time fori~~~~~~; SAil.I

is invited.

1WIN CITY Shrinettes, 7:30
: p.m. Thursday at home of Mary
Bowen, Rock Springs Road.

18 POUID
AID UP

WIFT'I
IlLLII

Open 9·5 Dally, TIIB Friday
210Ma

Club meet at home of Rev .
Robert McGee, 7:30p.m. Th~rs­
day .

• THIRD
WEDNESDAY
· Homemakers Club, 10 a.m. WedMEIGS COUNTY Demoerats
nesday at Syracuse Presbyterian · meeting, 8 p.m. Thursday at Car··
(llurch; potluck at noon. Demon- penters' Hall, E. Main, Pomeroy.
·slratioo on yeast breads by Dale
\
·Stoll, I p.m.; public Invited.
Friday
A ROUND and square dance
; BOOK FAIR at Racine will be held at the multi-purpose
Elementary School through
building on Mulberry Heights,
today, 9a.m. to 3 p.m. each day.
Friday, 8 to II p.m. Music will be
by the Stringdusters. The public

Thursday ·

HARTLEY SHOES

Tuppers Plains

y

THE ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club will meet at the
:; OFFICERS will be installed at
home of Louise Bearhs Thursday
.; meeting of the Order of Eastern . at 1: 15 p.m. Program chainnan
Star to be held Wednesday at 7:30
will be Teresa Abbott and Phyllis
·p.m. at the Harrisonville Masonic Skinner will have charge of the
:Temple. Members are to take
contest. New sunshine sisters will
;s&amp;ndwlcbes and salad.
he drawn.
MIDDLEPORT I.Jterary Club,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at horne of
Mrs. Carl ·Horky. Mrs. Sibley
Slack to present the book review.

U.S. IOVERIIEIT

Use.Our Lay-Away Plan

OldV.F.W. Hall
Call667·6485 ·

Buy Oassifieds .

meet at 7:30 Thursday night at
the Randolph Terrace located at
Second and Main, behind the
Twin River's Towers. The public
is invited. More infonnation may
be obtained from the local

IIIII

GALE

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING

Nallonal School Boanlll Alaoelalioa, Pareats 81111 Teachers
Alaoelallonand U.S. Office of Educallon. Tbe purpose of the progr8lll
Is 1o recognize the conlrlbulloos made by schools, school boanll, admlnlstraUon aad teachers lo the American way·of We. PicluRd are, 1r, Frankie Hunnell, represenllug tile auxiliary of Drew Webster Pool
39, American legion, BoDDie Fisher, Mary Hysell and Marjorie Gibbs,
teachers at Pomeroy Elementary.

Social Calendar
,.

IRIIILITED

APPLE FOR THE TEACHER -

Rt. 7

Wednesday

SPECIAL

' .

-

ond blctc.

ICotnt

.• •

lt'a the

LUCKY
WF
OIEIRY II 111111

. . PILL IIIII-

2 Plla GROUP

_...Uti f p, lft, MINIIY IMI W........ 'f'
THtaiY• .,..,,...,, ,,..., ........rUy t tiH S

SOFA

INSPECTED

CHAIR

.........

I

..__,_,,.._ .. . l f l l l l t -

•••::

'49goo

..................... ...:..·

, _ DIUVIIY IN10 OHIO

IWTER
SPIOIAL

IDUITY

FRYIRI

.,.,'

-..,
•
.·'.·

(

1••

CD

PRIOE

I

WHDLI ·

·PII

AND

WHILI .

u.s.D.a.

at a

•••

•

•
•

IYNORWACK

~
'

' I

'

'

(

•

~I

'

.•• '.
..
....•
'•

\I

••

'

,,

\

�.·
-

;P~a~pt=::~t=~T~h~e~D~a~l~ly~se:n~t~ln~e~I~::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::~::P~,~-~!]1~=--~M~Idd~l~!"!.!rt~,~Oh~l~o~--------~:;ii~~-------------:--jUIIIWII~~~~iiii~;- l

.. •

What's

•

'•

.

...,::

-Cooking?

•••
•'.

· area exposed. Meat that has been
der.
Add 3 medium oniC)Ill, sliced, 4 cut up or lfOIIIId spoils more quickly
than bigaer piece of meat: Stew beef
medium potatoes, cut into small
should be kept in the refrigerator no
pieces, 5 medium carrots, sliced.
Simmer covered until tender, longer than one pr two days, or up to
two months in the freezer at 0
stilTing occasionally.
Other vegetables may be added. degreesP'.
Here are some tiPI to make the
Some of these might be green be.ns,
"flouring"
step easier:
peas,_~l11L tomatoes, lima beaM,
green peppers, or celery, Try
- Dry meet completely with
tomato juice or juice from other paper towels before ftouring to get a
better COIIIing of n.,....
vegetables.
- P'or easier CGIIting, shUe both
You can buy stew beef in the
grocery stores. Watch for specials cubes and flour in a plutlc or paper
on this type of beef. You might try bag:
- When browning meat cubel, do
buying a roast on sale, such as blade
chuck, and cut your own stew beef. not crowd the .-n. H the .-n is
Cut the beef into pieces about one lrt- small. brown part of the meat at a
time.
ch square. CUI off fat and gristle.
For your free copy of a recipe for
Stew beef is highly perishable and
cannot be stored as long as other "Ham and Cheese Potato
meats. Why? Because it has been Casserole," con1act the l!:xtension
cut up and there is more surface Officut !IIU6M.

YOUNG CAREERIS1' - Tr!ldy RGalll ol Mid.dleport, a cosmetol•t at Hair Happealag In
GalllpoUs, waa selected a1 tbe Middleport Bua!D...
and Proleaslooal Women's Club "YtJUDg Cllreerlst"
Mollda;y night. She wiD compete lD the district competltloo lD tbe sprlajl. Pictured with Mn. ROWJh.

Chester Auxiliary
The Ladles Auxiliary met at the
firehouse Wednesday evening .
President Charlotte Smith opened
the meeting with The Lurd's
Prayer," followed with roll call. The
secretary's report was read by
Clarice Allen and the treasurer's
report by Opal Hollon. Money for
cards was collected. Plans -for the
Christmas dinner for the Auxiliary
and the firemen and families were
dlscussed. Tile party will be Mid at
the firehouse Sunday, Dec. 13 at 5
p.m. with ham and drinks furnished,
each family to bring a covoired dish.
The Good Qf the ·Order committee
will be in charge of the arrangements.
The next meeting of the auxiliary
will be a Christmas party oo Dec. 2
at the home Of Marcia Keller. There
will be a $2 gift exchange.
After the business meeting, games·
were enjoyed and ice cream was serM
ved by Opal Wickham to Charlotte
Smith, Dixie Beair, Clara Conroy,
Inzy Newell, Margaret Christy, Er·
rna Cleland, Marcia Keller, Opal
Holloo, Clarice Allen, Betty Newell
and Virginia Lee.

Local -organizations meet
LETART - The Cherokee
Homemakers under the guidance Of
the club president, Mrs. Alva
(Velma) Luckeydoo, sponsored an
educational meeting on Monday at
the Legion Hall on growing plants,
flowers and making pictures using
dried flowers and wall paper samples. The flowers were gathered and
dried by Mrs. Luckeydoo and Mrs.
Ollie Browning.
Mrs. Browning told Of easy ways
to grow plants and edible sprouts.
Mrs. David (Attarah) Dewhurst
usil)g a glass jar demonstrated how
to make a terrarium using charcoal,
pebbles; potting soil, and sand.
Mrs. Harold (Etta) O'Dell Of the
cUltural Arts Corrunittee, showed
cactuses she had planted using driftwood as well as various containers .
with cacti along with small Mexican
figurines which gave a realistic setting.
Mrs. Laurene Lewis gave some
tips oo Hower arranging and using a
basket in which she placed dried and
silk Howers to make an attractive
arrangement.
Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo displayed

golne to the winners. Laura Mae
Nice won the door prize. othen atteroding were Ada Morria, Betty
Roush, Me McPI&gt;!k, Leona Hensley, Ada Bissell, Ellzaheth Hayes,
Sadie Trussell, Marcia Keller, Inzy
Newell, Lora Damewood, and
Pauline Ridenour.

various nowers and wall paper sam~

pies for the ladies to make a picture
to take home.
Mrs. Roger Luckeydoo displayed
Christmas Cactuses and told Of the
do's and don't's in growing them.
Flowers donated by various clubs
were given to Sharon Gibbs, Hazel
Smith, Janet Bumggarner, Nellie
Casto, Iva Capehsrt, Leone Jaques,
Beulah Thomas, Pauline Grinstead
and Beverly Jordan.
Those attending from the Mason
Homemakers included Mrs.
Laurene Lewis, Mrs, Hazel Smith,
Mrs. J. Marshall; Rhododendron
Club, Mrs. Erma Roush, Mrs.
BeUtah Thomas, Janet Bumgarner,
Leone Jaques, and Mrs. Polly GriDstead; New Haven Club, Vicky
Roush; Cherokee, Joanne Ferguson,
Etta O'Dell, Ollie Browning, Kate
Stone, Sharon Gibbs, Beverly Jor. dan, Nellie Casto, Ivy Capehart, Attarah Dewhurst, Sandra Luckeydoo
and Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo.
Refreshments were served by

hostess Mrs; Luckeydoo to 20 persons.

Riverview PTO
Hugh Martin gave a demon. stration on techniques· of cardiac
pulmonary resusitation at a recent
meeting of the Riverview PTO held
at the school. There was also a
discussion on how to aJBist persons
who are choking.
Various school buying projects
were discussed as well as Christmas
projects both being sponsored by the
PTO. The fifth grade had the highe~
peccentage of psrents in attend!lnce.'
Mrs. Grace Weber extended an lrtvitation to the parents to attend the
Thanksgiving assembly being planned for the scliool by Mrs. Maxine
Whitehead, vocal music instructor.
The Thanksgiving holiday was announced as being Nov. 2&amp;and 'rl.
The teachers served refreshments
at the conclusion of the meeting.

New officers were .elected at the
recent meeting of the Past Councilors Club of Chester Council 323,
Daug:&gt;ters Of America.
Elected were Marcia Keller,
president; Laura Mae Nice, vice
president; Betty Roush, secretary;
Lura Damewood, treasurer; Elizbeth Hayes, Hower corrunittee, and
Leona Hensley, sentinel.
Erma Cleland presided at the
meeting which opened with lsi Cor.
13, the Lord's Prayer and tbe pledge
to the Hag. For roll call members
read something pertaining to
Thanksgiving. Officers' ·· reports
were given by Goldie Frederick and
Opal Hollon.
Charlotte Grant and Thelma
White were hosteO.ses for the
meeting. The Christmas supper will
be held at Crow's Steak House on
Dec. 9 at 6:30p.m. with a program
and $2 gift exchange following at the
lodge hall.
Margaret TutUe and -Mary K.
Holter conducted games with prizes

The 81111ual frieDdahip meetinC of
the DatJChlen II America in Dlotrict
13 was held at the Chel!ter lodge hall
recenUy with a potluck supper .. A
Thanlt!giving motif was carried out
in the table decOrations with Ada
Morris Of the host cOWicil giving the
blessing.
Fifty-six members from Perry
Council 283, New Lexington; Belle
Prairie Councll 1269, Belpre;
Guiding Star Council 124 Syracuae; ,
and CheiUr Council 123, attended
the affair. wty Wolfe, district
a.ssoclate eouncilor, Perry Council, .
presided.
Officially received were Esther
Smith, deputy of District 13; Faye
Hoselton, past state councilor; Mary
C. Moose, who serves on the state
publicity conunlttee; Mary K.
Holter, state legislative committee;
Essa Varner, deputy of Belle Prairie
Council 28!1; Betty Roush, deputy of
Chester Council 323; Eileen Clark,
deputy of Guiding star Council124;
and Helen Bauer, deputy of Perry
Council283.
Erma Cleland, district secretary,
read the minutea of the spring rally
held at Syracuse; Opal Hollon,
district treasurer, gave the

treasu'rer•s
report.
Mrs.on aSmith,
district
deputy,
reported
state
councilors meeting held in Colurn-

I
I
I

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

69 · Gold Filled 6C · Gold Filled Oia. 60 ·

I

.
,.......,

MEN'S DEPARTMENT

.

~-•len

. MAIN • ,OMIROY

U.S. GOV"T OIADID CHOICE·,
IO~LISS liEF

Rib Eye

'

20% OFF

,.

.......... lb.

FIOZIN, WIIHIONI, U.S.D.A. GIADI A,
11-lll. AND UP, YOUNG

Pre-Basted Turkeys

$299

399

$

Fresh Turkeys..... ... lb,

Mi~;d'F~;;:;;;;

.... -

1

. I

.

_

ANY DRESS OR CASUAL SHOES
MEN
INCLUDING DEXTER HUSH PUPPIES,
. GR'771 'ES AND REGAL
, lULl
fOR
_

1

lb.

'I

ISTMAS

1

I

•

~!

LAY-AWAY NOW FOR CHR
FREE. Gl FT WRAPPING

.,n;:

c· HAPMAN SHOES

.KIOGEINATUIALFLAVOI

'&gt;.;

.:-;.

.1•

"-~-

·California
Celery

,• . '

i

ii, ·

·-

1··17-ll. AVG.

I

-

CitJo,

79
79
'69C

IN THE DAllY DII'T .. KIOGEI

H':'
if.;

KIOOII ·

;:
•

2 II llllllfUdiotla.)
~- ••

,

&amp;IIIII*

..'

.~-

lio,.l

......
..'
•••
:"(
.,

&lt;

•-h Monoy-~-.., bo 1,.,.._,..,"' lht "All-." . . . .u~n
. 10
wHhaul ,.ny WllhdrawJI ponolty.
................
.......' _... __,..,. ......,........,..,

10

Baking Potatoes .. ao·:b.

lh•.

.

I·

••

•

)
\

3-lb,
can

= - - : - · n U H GIL 01. COLGATE

$

15 1
$ .
$349 1395
Fruit Bowls....

IIOUZI

Kroger Coffee .....

$199

121SIZifANGELOSOI

100thpGI te.........

.

Tangerines .. .. .. .. ... ...

3. $649

3$ 29

VA"AK

9·01.
Tube

For

.

THIINIIIOIVING 'IUIT

IAIKmANO

To

AVONDALE

Mandarin
Oranges ..

ll ·o1 .
. Con

KROGIIt

Cut
==,.,..,.~~ l1J111r19UI

l.t'l•••·

&lt;••

_

..

ntii'IICI,

LONGMO. .

69~·":.

49c.·
ggc::_;

AVOHDALI

Ya1llla
.....
FlaVOrlng... IlL
WltOLl KlltHEL

lvanilale
Ctm .... ..

16'/a -o&amp;,

&lt;••

ICIOGII FltOZIN

Pia
Slltlls ..

....
2-Ct.

COITCUnlrt

Froltlng 1••, .....
Mix ......... ,.,

. Pair

a ....

Whlppad
. ping .. . l-oa.
op
'COST CUnll IIAl

c....

$579

,~

·,

OOlD ClflT

$159

Marshmallow
U-oa.
Creme. . '"'

$1°9

Avondale
.
Clltsup ... . 32"01
111.

.

..... .... 39c

nUH IAIIID

Cost Cuner..... .
M
rln
IN f.-: DAift DEPT .,

II-RATIO

!!!~..!...
~HaG~nl ...
•

..,.,....... $119

age
,s:.:i"" ,,.... 33c

COlT C\IJTII PIOIIN

0tUIJI
1....1-

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

111.

sgc...

~~f,~lat· ·~~~- $1 4 ~:-'

.

.
24-ol. $139
.... .._,,_"',........,
Apple Pie .. .. .. .. l'le
Pu'.;kln Pie 24,;:·· 5149
0
Potato
Salad
.....
.'lh. 87
. . : . OilY
A-O.O,Iw _ _ _ _ _

'PIFICANOI!MIIITAIID

.,.

• First $2,000 of Interest earned filing a joint ret1.1rn;
·.
$1,000 filing Individually Is TAX·FREE.
• $500 minimum deposit. ·
• On•yelr maturity with fixed rate based on 70% of the
average Investment yield for one·year U.S. Treasury Bills.

.

Maraschino 1 ·01..
Cherries .. . . '"

KIOGII fiOZIN

.
.
.
.
3
51
Fres• Yams.................
4llu.IDAHC)

$129

HILLCitfST

.

'IOZIN

~l·

.....

,

COUNTIYCLUI~AISHAPED

....,..,...
.... (KtNI._.....tt,IO.,..
...
,.._J? !Sill:!:
lilllllt tl •
i

•

W_hole Fresh Hams.. lb.

tr folnt..tum, 6oft; )'OUr.,._ Wllnl t1 to 1Q C ttllt f1tfldi
~~-

sse:·:

Pear
Halves .

-

Canned Ham....... c~~- a::
;-;;pldn ......... :..... ·~::· 39c
'
$179 KWIOGh~ B d 320·01 $129
.
'lt·Gol.
ite rea .... Lvs. •
Ice Cream......... ctn.
IIIDS EYE
I
C
Cool Whip ...... :... ct::
C
Browri 'N'
Whipping Cream ~~~~:
I
Serve Rolls
Cream Cheese ....:;:

~

"'•••;,

-

12••·

''"'·

....... Coo

-polar
fiOZIN

Inter

'

Pat Pits

SNNaS

'

AYONOAll

Nartllem

N D LOAN COfDU ltNV

· 6H · Gold Fil~

216 w. Main St.
Pomeroy, OhiO

-

~

. 992-6655

(

11Vt « .

. . . . ..... c..

.

d
"'"1!!111 -'"':"·~·..
1!-IL--oa:-'-·--''--'-----,-------------:---..a..:...----:-------~.
We WIU Not Bt Open for IUIIIMII

on Wldnolll•y, Nev. II, Voter...

J

. 59c

as.

.

"~

I
I

Semi· Boneless
Smoked Hams

Oo,..,. _..,t$110tototfllsfunff .' ' •• ' . ' . ' ••• ' . '

:::.

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

69

C

$ 28

~.- •-..... - I N 1" -

__.. .

_lb.

KIO.GII, U.S.D.A. GlADE A. 16-IIS. AN~ UP

-

,·•-·•··-··-•il l l ij

,

.

'

FIOZIN, U.S.D.A. GIADI A, IIGUlAI
11-1.11. AND "', YOUNG

AVONDALE

..
........... ,...
1_._, .. ~····-,_.,. ___
,_--..-. ... - ........., __ ...... _.....

;

I
I

----11-UTIIIII.I.I
-~~ llft.alllllll,_ IIIII

Beef .Rib Roast ...... lb.

'

TAX·FREE "All Savers" Certificate

USE OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN

IIII

U.S. GOV1. GRADED CHOICE. 7-INCH CUT

J

'

6G • Gold Filled Die.

llltl 3POIIIS Willi COIPOI
UMIT ONI COUPON 'II ,fAMilY

IONI-IN

"'

'

:~$189
Top Sirloin Steak ....... lh.

.,

.

'

u.S. GOV'TGIADIDCHOICE, BONElESS

,.
.

"

•••••••••••••••••••
$299 Wishbone Turkeys . lb.

"

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

. a.

I
I
I

1--_:______:_________,.....____..;...____ •" ..t
•

matllltly

6F · Gold Filled

I

!

DIAMOND SAVINGS .

6E ·

~-

- j

Ph. "2·6342
317 N. 2nd
Middleport

•

..

I
I
I

•..

Ph. 992-2556
Pomerov. OH.
'locol•'\1 at the End of the Pomeroy-~son Brklte"

TO INTRODUCE TO YOU
OUR NEWLY REMODELED

..

Gunnoe1s
Country Sausage

I

~: ~ !:J!..~~~ !1040 i.i7.i'.itl~ ·,;-.,;;; ~~1

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j

CLOSID •ov. 26th.
THA.KSGIYI.G DAY

WI IISIIYI T.- RIOKT TO LIMIT QUAtmTIIS . NONI

IOlD TO DIALIII.

(2·LI. lOLl •. U.n)
WHOUHOG

.,

masdinnerstobebeldattheUniver·
·tl Y
Inn, Athens .~.,;
~ 8 12 30 p· m·
S
with a S2 gilt exchange. Eliza~
Hayes donated a comforter far a
fund raising pi'Oject.

YOUII FIIIENDL Y KIIOGEII STOllE
WILL IE OPEN TIL MIDNIGHT
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25th.

IN _POMEfiOY ANOGA\.LlfQJ.JjjJQPE5 .

·HAM SANDWICH······· 89'
WITH FRIES············ '1 29

Charlotte Smith lost the most
weight and there was a tie for runner-up among Paula CUnningham,
Shirley Johilson and Sue Kibble at
the Monday night meeting Of the
Slinderella Chester class.
Helen Grimm lost the most weight
at· ·the ~son class with Virginia
Johnson as rwmer-up. At the ·
Tuesday night Pomeroy class, Kay
Johnson lost the most weight and
Betsy Stivers was tbe runner-up.
Jackie Reed lost the most weight
at the Thiii'Sday exercise class with
Jodee Hysell as rwmer-up. A 26pound weight loss ribbon and certilicate was received by Madeline
psinter. There were eight new memhers taken into the classes and 87
pounds lost in the classes. Jo Ann

v.

.
\ fi '
.

Held bt The Faith Fellowship
Crusade for Christ Convnittee,
walkers for the event are sponsored.
Contact President Betty Pugh, 9164111, for more information.

SPECIAL OF THE WIEICI

•. I"

'
'

Special lleiYicee will he held tbit
weekend at lbe Racine Olurdl of the
Nuanne with lbe Sounds of

School to the roadside rest lD
Kanauga.

Re·Opan 7am Friday, Nov."27th.
And Remain Open Regular Hours

~~~~~

CAROUSEL
CONFECJIONERY

.... 10 .. INide by

COP,_ 1011-TMI lllioaa CO. -AMI PI1CII
.J, oooo--..., NOV. II THill IIAtuafoY NOV. 21. 1011

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

Chester Slinderella

For All Occiislons

and Daisy Canter, Athens. Faye
Hoselton, psst state councilor,
Belpre, thanked the distict for a
plaque presented to her .. Keith
Ashley was pianist for the meeting.

II=

Zimpfer li ' - ••• lbe
Dlllrlel 17 BPW ~. Mn. MarjGrle retty,
preoldenl ol the local club, aDd Mn. l'llyllla FIOwen,
Laocastor the Dlllrlel 17 director. Mn. ~h n1
prnealed ~ certlfl&lt;ate aod a gift from the club: :

sec-' from left,

·~=N:ews=om~e~hs=s~cha=rg=e~of~the=-c=la=·ss=e=s~.l~~~~~~"~N~e~x~l~to~E~Ib~e~r~fe~ld~s~i~n~P~o~m~e~r~o~y~"~~~~~ -~~ ~,. I·

DECORATED CAKES

Spring rally to be held
The spring rally was announced
for April3 at the Senior Citizens Center in pomeroy with Chester to be the
host council. Nominating commitee
for thst rally will be Bethel Laird,
~!pre; Janice Lawson, Syracuse,

Daughters
of America
disi!lct meeting

Chester CoWlcil 323

~

calllnc 1111•7 by Wedneldll;y.

SalY&amp;tlan to liD8 Saturdlly n!Mht al l
A New Year's Eve Dance will be
7:30 and Sunday 1110n11n1 at 10:30 held oo Dec. II It 9 p.m. at the
a.m. The clwrdi wiD allo be ho8ting Rutland American Legion hall.
the Meigs County Holiness Reservations may be made by
AaaodaUoo rally oo Nov. :M at7 :30 calling BobSnowden,.74NOGI.
p.m. The pastor Is Tom Collier, and
Day Hayman and his lingers will be
A "Walk for the Lord" will be beld
at the rally.
Saturday at 9 a.m. from Meigs High

I

•

Cherokee Homemakers

Teachen Aaoclatlan will.-&amp; Nov.
Z1 at lbe Mel&amp;llnn for a luncheoo.

The Meigs County Retired

f.

I

Home Ecoaomlst

Beef Slew

announcements

.,'

MeiJI Cellllty ExlelllloD

Cut into pieces II&gt; pounds stew
meat
Combine one-third cup Hour, 1¥..
teaspoons salt, and a small amount
ofpepper.
.
II( a large frypan or deep pot, heat
2 tablespoona fat or oil.
Coat meat with the Hour mixture
and brown thoroughly in hot fat.
Sprinkle remaining Hour mixture
over the browned meat and stir.
Add 3Y• cups water
.Cover tightly and siununer two to
three hours, or until the meat is ten-

Area

,.

By DALE M. STOLL

Hot and steamy, fuU of tender•
chunks of meat, potatoes and
vegetables simmering in a thick,
flavorful gravy, stew is a real
autumn delight. Stew is also low in
coot! The following recipe is an excellent basic stew, with ideas .for
other ingredients to add.

A hymn Iiiii will he beld It 7::111
Sa~ at 1111t Pteadam
Gospel Mlllkln, Blld KDall,. Cllanty a.! II. Ywl ed will .. Du
Hayman lllld u. Cawilry llymll
rtn.-1. The pabllc illavlted.

p.m.

IIGYMUI

33

C

·'••..,

$119 !!.
~..... .... .

....lei! u ....

..

'•
.• -..::!

�Ohio

Meig~

The Dai

property transfers

~

(.'[;,ssijll'tl P1111«'lf cover the
J#•llml'illll telephone exrhange&amp; ...

Gamet· Ease., suttoo.

Dale Bachner, dec. to

Bacbner,Cert. oflralll., Rulllnd.
R. Gene Brase~ Ellen L.llruol to
SuMn 'l'bcms\ln to Ida Kine, 1.18 Ohio Power Co., Eue., R•d1•'"' .

acre~, Seiplo.

G,l llia co. AreA Code
614

David E. E1lla, El8lne L. EUla to
Ohio Power Co., Eue., Rptlend
Myrtle Holter to 'Ohlo Power Co.,

.

Ida Kine fo Mae Mary, 1.18 acrea,

Scipio.
Florence Musser to Leading Creek
Conservancy, Right of Way,

E. Diddle, Right of way, Lebanon.

Jenj
Veleela L.Rowe,
.2
Bill L.
Hill,Rowe,
Jr., ·Vickie
HlU to
.

·~:c~~Seelig,
Joyce E. seeug
Leading Creek Conserv. Dist.,

Hauslo!!'l'!!adoy. (APLaserpboto).

uc·rJON

Mlamllo promote lhe llrsl aiiiiWII "Carnival Miami" -programmed lo
be lhe largest Hispanic Festival ever beld In the United States. Amaz will
be ldnd of "Carnival Miami" which will be held in Mareb IIIZ. ( AP Laserphoto).

Court convictions will cost more
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
cost of being convicted in an Ohio
courtroom soon will increase by $10,
with $7 of that fee going to the state
crime victimS program.
State officials estimate that the
fee increase will generate another
$ll million lor Ibe crime victims,
program during the budget period'

that ends on June 30;1983. :
The other $3 will be u.sed to pay
public defenders who represent
defendants in criminal cases.
The staie budget, wh)ch was
signed Into law over the weekend by
Gov. James Rhodes, increased the
court costs. But the new law, which
is 1,100 pages long, sliD is a mystery
to most ublic officials in the state.

AUCTIONEER: LONNIE NEAL

cept all'fhe land lying East
of the Portland Road and
Racine formally deeded to
Flora Alll$011,
.
Deed Reference: Volume
96, Page 599, Meigs County
Deed Records.
You are required to an·
swer the Complaint within

NACK et al.
Plaint! Its,
·VS·

The unknown heirs and
devisees ol
IDA
P.

28 days after the las!
publication of this notice
Which will be published on·

WOLFE, ell I.

Defendants.
case No. 11001

ce each .week for she con ·
secutive weeks. The la5t
PUblication will be rriade on
November 18, 1981 and the
28 day5 for answ~r wl!!
commence on that date.
In case of your failure to
answer
or
otherwise
resobnd as required by the

J'IOT!CE BY
PUBLICATION

To the unknown heirs and
devisees of Ida P . Wolfe:

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for .
Classlfleds ·and

Ohio

Public Notice

PHONE 992-2156

IN THE.
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
RUTH SCHARTIGER, Ad·
ministratrlx of .tile Estate
of Howard L. SNrls,

l - HOUS.. for Rtnl
4:1- Mobllt Home•

r.rRent
45-Furnblltf Rooms
46-Spact tor Rent
47-Wtnted .. Rtnt
4f-Equlp,.ent lor ..... ,
4t-,orLnM

1-PuMic Stlt
&amp; AtKtlon

f-Wanted to au.,

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

December, 1981, or
judgment b.Ydefault will be

renctered against you.
Ruth Scharttaer.
Adminlstriilrlx
01 tne Estate of
Howard L. Searls, .
Dectasea

M. C. ond C. F. Rathburn;
thence north 34 degrees
west 82 112 feet; thence north
17 degrees west '19 feet;
thence S&lt;MJih 73 degrees
w..t 80 feel; thence SOIIIh

REFERENCE DEED:
Vol. 259, Page 55. Meigs
County Deed Records.

FredW. CroW, Ill

Attorney for Plaintiff

(10) 21. 28
6tc

afl~r

' $4-MIK. Mer&lt;h.lltdiM
u-Bulldlne Suppllu
5t- Pth tor 5iilt
$7-Muslullnstrum..,l
· st-Frultl I Yettflllalts
S..,.For Stletr Trade

n-Scltolltlnstrl~ttllft

I.._Radlo, TV,
I Cl Repair
, ....wanted To Do

I FINANCIAL

Rtal Est1te- Gener11 ,

2J-PraltUIOI'III

S.rvlcts

........

JJ-v.tnl&amp; 4 w .D •

....

,._Motorcyttn

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

,.,.,tlc:•tloft

IIHMIIY 2:. ,,M.IlrtfiY

NEW LISTING - IN
TOWN - 2 bedroom

1!-M..,.,,...,.,,.....,.
...... ~.....
,._.ICU"
...'"'"''"•
lf-lltKtrlell&amp;

Mall This Coupon wlttl Retnlttance.
The Dally Sentinel
Ill Court St.
Pomeroy, 011. U7" ·

r

frH

Restock, p1rts, etc.

Order Guns 10"Above Wttolesele

useoeouOPMENT

STUART WAYNE

1- No .l601l Olesrl Ford
Tnctor wt Cab
MDO· ~OlODiesel J.D. Tractor
Moo-m' Row Nrw Idea torn

PULLINS

FARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS &amp; SERVICE

siding
ar

...,.....

I Blue Frost

I Creek Bed

'12~.yd.

.,...........,,..... .... riiM .......

..., ...

II s

1

r

SUNRISE
II:A'TING &amp;
H'-"
COOLING

BAILY'S
SHOES
Boots &amp; Shoes for
the whole family.

1 Locations
322 N. sec : Ave.

Middleport
&amp; !0781 u.s. 35
Jackson. OH .

Tappan Recuperative
Furnace, Coleman Air
conditiolng, Arkla·Ser··
vel Gas Air Condition··

Have room and board in
boarding home for elderly.

614-'1'12 ·6022.
BABYSITT I NG i n my
home . Rt. 62 between Pt .
Pleasant and Mason. 304·

675-4506 .

Junk cars with or without
motors, and batteries . Call

13

388-9303.

SANDY AND BEAVER In ·

- - -Insurance
= --

surance Co. has offered
se'rv ices for f ir€,' Insurance
coverage in Gallla County
for almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet in ·
divldual needs. Contact
Neil Ins . Agency, agent.
Phone 446-1694.

Buying
Gold,
Silver,
Platinum, old coins, Scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes ava i lable . Also
coins &amp; coi n supplies for
sa le . Spring
Valley
Trading, Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025 or 446·8026 .

AUTOMOBILE

does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad in this
col 'u mn. There will be no

992·2143

Gas dryer. Call245·5064.

Girls brown uniform, size
7. Call collect 675-6480.

Oh .

SERVICE

' LOST Blue Tick hound, an·
swers to .the name Misty .
M issing in the Friendly
Ridge area. If found,
please call 256· 1434 or 256·

614-698-679!
!1 ·16·tfn

11 ·13-1 mo.

vR. 'OLD

Let George Mitltr
check your present electrical system .
Residential
&amp; Commercial

RANCt:t -

PORTLANO AREA - 1 miles from bridge. 3 to 4

home and 2nd house tOr
the parents. Swimming
pool. Lots of trees and
flowers . 9 room older
home whlctl has 2 baths,

·

Call742·3195

NEW BRIDGE AREA - A·frame. This 3 stor~
- r home on • plus acres features 3 BR's, 2V.
IN!tfll, fireplace, bullt·ln IN!rbecue. 2 dec:ka, 2 petl"
a m1ny extras. Setllrote garage and outbuildings
Prlcld In me mid S11's. OWner may finance pert. "

'HUNTER SPiCIAL - I acre ~ B.R. fur·
trailer wlfh city water In Long llolforn.

,..Id.., ... .....
,.._..,..,.. .... ....

Thurs.ll:OG-8:00
Fri. IO:to-S:DO
Union Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio
PHONE tt2-3021
Ap"lntm•nts •ot
ntenurv. Fom,.,ty K•I ..... Kurl

'''"''I

.,,..,,...,

•

tnsulalion
eStorm Doors
estormWindows
• Replacement
Windows

LOST-Male. black &amp; white
cat, vicinily Gallipolis
. Ferry. Answers to name·
~~r! h a~ Reward. Phone
'
· ·

75 64

greyhound. female,
low, vicinity of Kapp
87. Reward. 30.;.

Free Est!' mate

James Keesee
Ph. 992 ..2772

10·28: 1 -·

DRIVEW'nAY
LIMESTONE.
GRAVEL

REPAIR WORK

bing and lot 50x200.
Near stores and schools.

11 ·6·1 mo.

greyhound.
female ,
yellow, vicinity of Kapp

Coal
Ph, 992•2772
•

U...

fMIS8

11 . 12 _1 mo.

KHp Thl• Ad for
Future R.terenc:e

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Ridge, Rt. 87. Reward. 304·
372·5686.

---===;.;;;:=

.7

Moving

Yard Sale
Sale

Friday

Saturday, 9·5.
clothing, some

&amp;

Tools,
dishes,

knick-knacks, lois of misc.

Call Ken Young

446·4813 .

•

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

·~- ond
-""""'''
romodoll~
_RoOfing a

,

&amp;•""'

~retwotk

l

-Piumb!naond
- oiOCtriai'Worl&amp;
(""hll-)

-·-

V. C. YOUNG Ill
_............

c. R. MASH

CONSTRUCTION

ter turn right on Rt . 55'~, go

3 miles, turn right on
Wheaton Rd., 3 rd. house on
rlgh!. Everything must

•

sell!

Yard Sale Weds. Nov. 18, 9·
? Bad weather cancels.

TV. service ca lls. Ca ll 992 ·
2034. Also used color TV for
sale.
Will baby si t in my home,
weekly basis. Inquire at 222
No. 3 rd . Middleport .

Custoll! ki!Chons- Ill'
g!1onc11,
custom
Jhrooms, remodeling,
plum bin, tltctrlc, ond
nea!lng.
FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992..011
992·7656

WILL do Holiday baking,
candy
making,
c ake
decorating . Sarah Pearson,

St., Syracuse.

RADIATOR
SERVICE
From tho lmllltst
Ho,tor Core
Lorgost Radio lor.

304 · 675 · 5527

Maintenance r epa ir, ex·
per ie nce all phases, no job
too
large
or
small,
reasonabl e. 675·3985 or 614-

379·2796.

742·2354 .

F !nanela!
HELP • WANTED
Cytotechnologist ASCP or
equivalent needed for a
large mtiltispecialty group
practice ;n Southeastern
Ohio with two pathologists
in a CAP' accredited labor·
tory . Competitive salary,
excellent benefits. Send
resume
to
Personnel
Department, Holzer Clinic
Ltd.,
P.O.
Box 1 344,
Gall ipolis, Ohio 45631 .

21 -.- ---.---BuSiness--------·
-- ~Df!.'!!lJ.!L ._
Trailer Park, 15 spaces
plus 3 bdr., brlt:;k home on
approx. 3 acres, will divide,
$150,000 with 50,000 down ,
owner will carry. Also park
owned trailers available in
Jackson . Good cash .flow.

Cali 286·7019.
A HIGHLY PROFITABLE

Part-time (one or two
hours a day) Licensed
Practical Nurse (LPN&gt; to
dispense medication to
residents of an
in·
termediate care facility for
the mentally retared in
Bidwell . S5.7S/ h0ur. Con·
tact Cathy Neal, P.O. Box
906,.Gallipoli$, Oh 45631 , or

ext.

lht

1i
Rldfoltlt 1 jiiC1• • 1
NATHAN 11001
SJYn.lxporllt!ct

SMITH NEIJQN
M0101S INC.

and beautiful Jean and
Sportswear Shop of your
own . $12,500 to $16,500 in
etudes inventory, fixtures ,
in ·shop training, one paid
airfare to Apparel Center
and more . Over 100
nationally known brands
sut~h as Levi, Lee, Chic,
Calvin Kl~ln. Jordache.
Zena . Call Now! Paceset·
ter Fashions, Inc. 1·800·643·

332.

Buckeye Community Services Is an equal op·
portunity employer.

6305.

EXPER IENCED
TAX
PREPARE R WANT E 0

22

Peii!INY• OIJ,
.. ft. tftollr4
H·llc

MoneyloLoan

=---=='-'-'==~­

Hourly rate and Bonus
Plan·Full or part time

Columbus Firsl Mortgage
Company FHA·VA Finan·
cing Loan Rep. Cookie

hours. BENEFICIAL INCOME TAX SERVICE,
&lt;146·2765. An Equal Op·

Kraulter (304)675·3473.

--

•I

·------·-~

J bedroom older home, ap·
prox. 4 acres , 10 miles from
town . Phone 675-6597 .

Two story house, 1 rooms, 2
baths, outbu ilding , and 2· ~
car garage. $41 ,900. 675·

4208 .
The Roush home at 2515
Mt. vernon, Pt . Pleasant,
is for sa le. Call the son at, •
614·927·5413.
• ..,

- ~-

32 -

--

·-~.--··-

- -Mo-bile -Homes

--

·-·

--- ~ r~e

TRI · STATE

"

MOBILE ·

HOMES. Gallipolis. Year
end sale, pri ce reduced,
used mobile homes . CALL

446·7572.

"

----.--

12X65 mobile horne. 2 lots In
Plantz Subdivision . Call
446· 1294.

Call446·n40.

12x65 Skyli ne Acadmey, 3
bdr .. exc. cond . Ca ll 446·

8134.
_ ...........

---~·-------

1912 12x60 Indy mobile
home. 18x36 garage, 3
acres of land in Vinton
area, $10,000. Call388·8747 , ;
1970 12x70 mobile home, 3 ,
bedroom, 1 112 bath, new
carpet,
underpinning .
Priced to sell. 675·3793.

- -----·---I
Big SelectiOn of clea n, us~ d •; :
mobile homes . Kanauga
Mobile Hom es, Kanauga, · :
Oh 446·9662 .
' :
Seven-eights acre with .. :.
12x60 · 1968 Schult mobil e , ~­
home. With new 12x28 room . i
addi tion . Reedsville, Ohio. l

614·378·6312 alterS p.m .

1971 Darian 12 x 65, 3
bedroom s. 1972 Crown
Haven, ld x 65 with 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms .
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B ''&lt;~ S
Sales. Inc. 2nd and Viand
Sts. Pt . Pleasant, WV .
Phone 675·4424 .
MOBILE home loc.;ted in
Camp Conley, extra nice
and clean) phone 304·895-

3'167 .

portunity Employer.

23

GET VALUABLE training

Pro.esslonal
Services

Piano tuni.n g and repair,
Love your neighbor tune
your Plano. Bill Ward,

as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier. Phone
us right aw.av and get on

wards Keyboard. 446·4372.
Gallipolis. ·

Auction every Wid. night
at Hartford community the eligibility lis! at 992·
Bldg. Selt limo 7PM. Lots 21.56or992·2157 .
01 new loused merchandise
'
tiHiry week. COMfgnmont
lrom clooltrs lo Individuals Wonted RJ'I par! lime day
Richard shift oniy,IV nursing team
wt 1co
exp. preferred but not

PIANO

USED MOBILE
576·2711 .

HOME .

1973 3 bedroom U x 70. un=
derpinned . 675·4064 .

-

---·-----

TUNING · Lane

Daniels.
Associate:
Brunlcardi Music. Phone

614-742·2951 or 614·992·2082.
Discount to MeiQS residen·

~· •

ts.

Memorial Pharmacy . 614·
992·6297 E.O.E.

1973 14 x 70, 3 bedroom , in
very good condition, priced
for quick sale. Phone 882 ·

HARPER Adult Care Cen·

3433.

Day care center help, toea I
area. Send resume to ~
Banyan Lane, Port Orange,

fer-providing the personal
care your elderly need In a
home like atmosphere .
Vacancies now availlble.

- · necHUry. Cell Veterans

t
wonloctteluy
WANT TO BUY Old furniture and Antiques of all
kinds, call l&lt;onnolll Swain,
2!4· 1'167 In tho evening&amp;.

HOUSE ·Meadowbrook Ad ·
dition . 3 bedroom, fam ily ·'
room with fireplace, cen·,.r
tra l air, basement . 304·675·,

WI L L do cleaning of of· MOBILE HOME ADD·Afices, churches 1 buSiness. ROOM. Complete selection
Honest and depen dable. of sizes and floor plans
..Phone 304·fJ75·2885. - ·· delivered &amp; install ed. Fren·
ch City Mobile Home, Inc.

Help Wanted

446·1642

.

for

experience with ca rpentry,
plumbing, electrical. some
appliance repair. Call 304·
675·5981 or 675·3770. 675·
3770. Ask for' steve.

Why settle for less. Sell the
best. Sell Avon. For more
information call 446·3358 or

Call

.

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S '
estimate .
QUAL I TY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WILL do odd jobs, genera l WEST, GAL LIPOLI S, RT
house maintenance. Ha ve 35. PHONE 446 ·3868.
ca l l

Jean Stout residence. 7th

•Hot Water Tanks

10

11

---·---

Wanted to do babysitting in
my home, Spring Valley
area . Call446·6574 .

Items. Take Rl. 160 to Por·

for Fott •-rvlco
~
9 • 1
PARTSANOSEIIVICE
AU MAKES
•Washers
•Dryort
•Rongoo
•Oispotals
· •Oioh_,ho,.

lt====::====j-========:jt;:==;;;,~;=~
1 - - - '"7-"A"'
PuDIIc
Slit_ __
uc:t=lon:::..,
COMPLETE
-

CLASS - InWoodburnlng
fireplace
the family ' 11
room In lull basement.
Genie ' garage door for
your convenience, 3 nice
size bedr9')ms, 2 full
·batns, blrc~ equipped
kitchen In this brick. .
vacant, you can move
rlgn' ln . Wi ll take
cheaper home.
SUE P. MURPHY,
GORDON
B. AND
HELEN L. TI!AFDROo'
~IIOCIATEI.
• ·'

~·

~r::~~:

~::S·. 1 o::OH~OO

WELDING SHOP

I), '!1'-111.1

(

Mon.

ft.I.IO
~

•Gas &amp; Electric
• C u ttl ng
•Brazing
•20 Yrs. Exp.
Reasonable Rates
866 South Third
Middleport, Ohio
PH. 992·5663

· 'ljtl.l((l I

New Hours:

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

&lt;146·0053.

11-----------:t----------ir----------~

privacy ,
HUNTING
AND
CAMPING 1-4
acre5
of
Forked Run. Turkey
and · deer. par k your
!railer and enjoy !he
wild. OnlY $12,000.
121 ,ooo.oo _ 8 rooms,
new gas furnace, large
basement, topper plum·
A QOOd b~Y today .

INSULAnON

2-S-tfc

natural gas furna~e. 3
car garages and

.

LOST Red Oachsund, East
end area of Gallipoli•.
childrens pet, Reward. Call

Stylists: Mark Mora
and Cindy Cuthbertson.

For all of your wir·
ing needs.

equipped
kitchen .
Asking$57,000.

e. R.'s, vJnyl sided, large orctlard.

Will do baby sitting in my
home . Garfield area. Call

6._ _~
Lo
""
st and Found

Rt. 2, Albany, Ohio

Sale or Rent. Beautiful
country home to qual if led
persons.
2 or
more .,
bedrooms .
Deposi t J
required . Located in Flat·
woods area . 446·2359.

1542.

Family man wants steady
work on farm with house
included, good worker with
references. Call388-8879 .

ing,Sheet~etaiVVork .

SUNRISE HEATING
&amp;COOLING

HANDYMAN SpeciaL For
young couple with fla ir for
remodeling and desire to
learn carpenter, plumber &amp;
electricial work. 6 room
plus house partially started
to rebuild. 289 Broadway
St., Middleport. Inquire at
300 Broadway or call Joh,n
Krawsczyn, Sr. 992·2717 .
Could
be
in · law
arrangement, upper and
lower apartments.

Or rent·3 bedroom fur· ~
nished home on Bud Chat·.,,
tin Road on big level lot.

Butcher's Shoppe Custom
butchering &amp; processing.
Call 446-2851, Gallipolis,

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

5123,

3 bdr . carpe ting, fireplac e,
redwood dock, lot w j thsmall · house. 2 bdr.. 671
South Front Ave ., Mid·
dleport. 9V2·517l .

576·2711.

LOCUST posts. 8 fl. long .
4" small tip·chip poles. 304675·6325 after 6 p.m .

charge to the advertiser .

IN ·

SURANCE
been
can·
celled?
L ost
your
operator's License? Phone

Two pupies, Border Collie,
female . Phone773·5185.

HAIR REMEDIES

heat. Wood cabinets in

to ACRES - Owner Will corry on land contract-

(

BUYING GOLD &amp; SILVER
paying cash for anythjng
stamped 10K , UK, 18K and
.dental gold. Class rings,
wedding rings, silver coins
or
anything
stamped
sterling. Clarks Jewelry
Store. Gallipolis 446·2691 or
992·205-4 in Pomeroyl

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

PAINTERS

3 bedr'oom hOuse-. 2 acres. 2
bathS. family room . Full
basement, -garage. 949·
2079 .

Ohio. Gall446·2282.

WILSON
BUILDERS

Ph. 949-2160 or 949-2412
7·5-lfc

1559 sq. fl . Almost new
on 3 acres of land. Has 3
nice bedrooms , 111~
baths, central air and

IUILDIJ'IO SITE - Near Portland. 1'12 acre,
sultllblt tor undei'Oround or solar honle. OWner may
help finonce wtth ~ peyment.

I

on Kenneth Watson farm ,

..~~~----~~~~~~~~L---------------t-----========-=i;:::::::::::=:=jw~
J&amp;L BLOWN
MillER ELECTRIC
EAFORD

2 HOMES AND 6
ACRES A family

· ~=
~

No Hunting or Trespassing

11-12·1 mo.

1

CLOSE TO J'IEW BlliDGE- Has !o sell at $12.900.
Could be 3 B.R. homo. Stove and refrigerator stays.
Goad starter home or lnvntment property.

~. NM

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

Call After 4 P.M.
992·7656

"'""

TOM HOSKINS

PRICED RIGHT.

For

oiHir 10"- mortgage. Asking 135,900.

' lti'-M.H. le.-tr

.

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

614-992·2181

MIMit ........... Y•PIII ..... 1te _..,... MIY 1111ta Mill
wtHI ....... II ee-l cM'It . . . . . ~ ... Nw......, .. Clrtet

t,

for

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

AND CUSTOMIZING
R.,.Biue and R.,.Finlsh

Dl'ilh!r

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

For
Farm
and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
,H eating Oil.

doWs, well (onstructtd. assume small equity &amp; take

......f....,._.,., ............ . .... . .. M. .

--·

. GUNSMITHING

'----------;-----------t-----------ji
' ANY PERSON who has
r
---::-:--:-::-:-=-:;::---, anything to give away and

LANDMARK

BEAUTIFUL BRICI&lt; - Home has 3 B.R.'$, 1'12
batht, laundry Off kitchen, fireplace, storm Win-

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

. t~l '''*'*'·'•'w~*h

SALES &amp; SERVICE

or

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

POMEROY

e.R. trailer, large living room, eat-In kitchen In·
eludes apptiantes. Offered at S11,500.

...,,~.

collect donations to be paid
on the tanker truck. The
Dept. members will start ·
their drive Nov. 21 and will
continue until the !rea has
been covered. Firemen will
identify themselves when
ask:ing for donations. All
donations will be greatly
appreciated.

Ellm Resthome. care for
aged, or bed

CASH PAID for clean, late
model used cars. Smith
Bulck·Pontiac, GAllipolis,

Ph. 992-7201

CALL:

IS-Oefttrll H•uttne

u, ............ - . ....... . ..... .................

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

BOGGS

Utility Buildings

Quiet slreet In Racine. Nice 2

NEW LISTING -

Clllent hOmo, ox~oliont
D!'lco. 3 l&gt;edrooms, full
IN!somenl. Largo lot.

The Racin~ Fire Dept. will
be conducting a door to

S&amp;W

•-

CENTRAL 'REALTY .

Excellent location, ex·

_.. ~­

SfiT6'Y YOUR NlEDf

Farm Buildings

3

JO'Ho dovm.

r ~

_.J......--L..j._

U.S . J{t. sa East
Guynlttr, Ohio"
Autnoriaect John Deere,
New Hollilnd,. 8nh Hog
Fum e qulpment

311 ttc

1-(614)·992·3315

D-U~

U~t~tttl-* ···

Call

Phone

· Rates alllll Ottler Information

·;

&amp;Aluminum

lltlmlfll, 949·2101
949·2160.
No sunday (1111

216 e. Second Street

Asking $25,000.

shooting.

992-2181, Pomeroy, Oh.

''Beautiful, cUstam
BUilt GlrlgH"

VI!,GIIL B. SR.

acre5, could be ..

Olf

Prizes wfll be turkey, ham.
and bacon.

mission . Kenneth {Butch) BEDS· IRON, BRASS, old
without
written
per·.
Watson.
furniture, gold, silver
dollars, wood ice boxes,
Stolen Property . Antique stone jars, antiques, etc .,
households .
kitchen safe. Antique Complete
dining room cabinet. Two ,W rite: M .D. Miller, Rt . 4,
rotking ctlairs . Other Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992-7760 .
Items. Anyone knowing or
seeing this furniture being CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
• Excavating
hauled in the vicinity of diameter 10" on largest
Flatrock, wv on October 10 end. $12.50 per ton. Bundied
Now picking up junk
• Water, Sewer &amp;
or later, a liberal reward Is slab. $10 .50 per ton .
Water·Sewer· E lectric
auto bodieS. Top prices
Gas Lines
offered. 675· 1302 ,
Deliverd to Ohio Pill let Co.,
Used Color TV Sets for
Gas
Ditches
paid . for· auto bodies,
eOumpTruck
Rock
Springs
Rd ..
Sale.
Water Line Hook·ups
strap iron and metals.
Pomeroy. 992·2689 .
NEW PHONE NO.
Septic T'anks
1 mile west of Fair·
POSITIVILY
no
hunting
on
Licensed &amp; Bonded
grounds on Old Rt. 33.
County Certified
the old H . C. Brown Farm
--~---• Mon.-Fri. 8: 30 to 4:00
Roush Lane
opposite Racine locks Gold, silver, ster l ing, ·
276 svcamore St.
After Aug. 3
Cheshire, Oh.
Letart, wv . Signed Bill Mc - jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
Ph_ '1'12-6564
Middleport, Ohio
Ph.367-7560
Daniel.
currency , Ed Burkett Bar·
10· 12·tfc
9·21-tic
ber Shop, Middleport. 992PLEASE return tree stand 3476.
----------j----------t---~------"t-------.....,-""1 (engraved Bill crawforcU
r--~::::-7':-:::---,) taken
from
Wiseman NEED MONEY? I need
property-no
questions furniture. New, used or an ·
ALL STEEL
CERTIFIEO GAS
asked. J04·675·1408 .
tique. Also buying glass,
Our Specialties
china / gold, silver, coins,
Cigs: nc pk.; cartons
Hunter's special. 10 ft . watches, chains, etc. Mar·
$5."95 reg.; $6.05 lonJ~s.
Sizes
tin's General Store, Mid·
we
sell
the
following:
1 Frankll'1 pickup camper, dleport, Ohio. 992·6370.
"From 30x30"
AND
8 Pk. RC, Diet RC or RC
self contained, $950. Phone
SMALL
100 Sl.29ptusdep.&amp;tax
II 615-3509 after
5 pm .
·.
"r ·'•
6 pk. AC ·produch$1.59
Raw furs, hides. scrap
8 pk. Pepsi products
batteries.
ALSO
B &amp; E Shoe Service. 427 metal s,
S1.39 plus dep. &amp; tax
Sizes from 4x6 to 12x40
6 pk ~ Pepsi products
Second Ave. Gallipolis, radiator's, ginseng, yellow
"Interior Remodeling"
$1.99 &amp; tax
Ohio will be closed for em· root, and merchandise
8 pk . 16 oz. Cokes
FREE ESTIMATES
Ployees vacation Novem · brokering. Harper·Ha lste·
$1.39 plus dep. &amp; tax
Phone 992·2771
ber 26th. through Decem- ad Salvage Company, 300
Hours: Mon.·Sat.
Rt. 3, Box .j4
or992-7093
ber 6th. Will open Decem· Eleventh Street. 675·5868 .
6A
.M.·9
P.M.
Also Flea Market open
Racine, Oh.
ber 7th.
Sunday 8 A.M.-9 P.M.
daily . Open
Monday ·
Ph. U4-843·2591
II · 15-1 m..o.
10·28·1 mo.
Friday 1·5 pm .
4
, Giveaway

home in gOOd condition
with gas·forced air heat.
New central air. Full
basement, garage, WOOd
burning fireplace. All

FIVE I'OIJ'ITS AREA-

SERVICES

TueMIIY lttnl Prlfty 1: • t'.M.

50&gt;70 lot. $29,900.

163,000.

,._'-"'""• ....... llfll

Dtldll~··
MOnel•vt :OOonS.turolv '

(11) 4, 11.18, 31c

deck . Eaotern Dillrid.

Acc•Nrtn

n.... ,.....,.,,

wont·Ad Advertising

Clerk

Buy Now &amp; Save $2·$6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpel in stock to pick from.
Regular backed, carpet installed free
with pad. Good selection Roll End's Rem·
nanls '$2.50 up.
·

rooms. Full basement,
rec. room. large sun

,._...ti&amp;MNI'I
,._
,..,...,

Jt- · R.. I Estt'-W•ntea

Probate Judge/

Good selectioA of carpel thru the 30th of Odober.

OUTSTAND!J'IG DESI·
GNI FIIHI l&gt;edrliom SPill
ltvtl In e greet subdivision. · Spacious

TRANSPORTATION

n-Truckl for S.lt

3)-F•r..l ,., lilt
:t+-IVIIMII lulltiii"WI
U-Lett&amp;ACrN. .

Robert E. Buck

workShop. On approx. 1

7'-•u,..lllf'Sille

31-No....SIMSIIt
U-'Mobi.. Hett~tl

Pomeroy, Ohiol was a~
pointed AdMin strator of
the esti!Jte of t-lazel Virginia
Smith, Heceased, late of Rt.
4, Pomeroy, Ohio.

·5~.yd . .

yd. installed

home. hardwOod floors.
gas forced air heat, on

acre. S49.900.

I

'12

NEW LISTIJ'IG ~ IN
TOWN - 4 bedroom

H-Hor a Grtin
.41-SeH &amp; Ptrllliltr

e REAL ESTATE

Cour!, Case No. 23578.0Wens J. Smith, Rt. 4,

Cash·n-Carry
1 Green Tweed
1 Rust Tweed

11

E.Mo'lo.
POMEROY,O.
992-2259

•i-L.Ivtstock

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

....

22-Mon•.,tolN•

the Meigs county Probate

FOR WINTER
3 ROLLS

MiDDLE POR'T

n -wo~ntHtolluy

33. '_
-34.
__
__-

hand

tne

lzaak Walton Farm 3 V2
mil.. ·south of Chester and
Shade R lver Rd .
The
match will start at l p .m.
Sunday Nov. 8 and wtll be
continued each Sunday at
the same time until deer
seafrOn.
It will be bench

J~

For bulk detlverr of
gasoline, ·heating oi and
diesel fuel, call Landmark,

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Shop
.FALL CARPET SALE

Utlll!y room, screlmed
porch, garage. 516,200.

•t-Ftrm EQUUIIII~f

21-lu•IMu

""•v ..,.,,

and

slug

at

Plaza, &lt;146·8025.

SIDING

Rutland Fumiture

!he

Newly constructed split
ent.ry
home.
3
bedrooms, 21/:'f baths,
family room. farge
dining room. garage &amp;

I

GNM~rtunuw

3.1. - - - ' - - -

4. 11. 18. 25.

PROBUE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY,OHIO
ESTATE OF
HAZEL

You are reqUired to an·
swer the Complaint Within

twenty·elghl days

(11)

SMI .T H,

NOTICE OF
. APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On October 30, 1981, in

·---·PUbliCN~ttce :--=

from Pomeroy . Over an
acre of land with 2
bedroom: I floOr plan
home. All electric heat.

u--Antict~t~tl

U-lnswtnct

32. _ _ _ __

In

17 degrees east 99 feet;
thence south 34 degrees
east 82'12 teet; thence norfh
713/A degrees east ta the
Plac;e at beginning, con·
taining one·third acre,
more or les&amp;.

Public Noti(e

RIGHT SIZE- RIGHT
PRICE - 10 minuteS

MERCHANDISE

I

1+-lusiMU Tralnlftt

31 . _ _ _ __

beginning

deer

matcn

;'_______.--T-------· ---T------------~---------"'1
r

tor only $19.'100 , .

st..:.HoUS.heiOOCMds
!2-CI, TY, Rllll E•ulpmlnl

11-HtiiiWintH
n-su~tlon W•tN

_ _ _ _ __
_ _ _ _ __
_ _ _ _ __
_ _ _ __
_ _ _ __

Defendants.

44--AJIIIrf!Mt'lh for REn!

7-YardSIIt

24.
25.
26.
27.
21.
29.
30.

Plaintiff,
vs.
CHARLES
WILLIAM
SEARLS, ET AL

,~RENTALS

ANNOUNCEMENTS

t-I..Oit l:nd F"'nll

- -·- - - -----_ _ _ __
_ _ _ __
_ _ _ __

Deceased

AD INDEX

s-HaHYAfl

19,
20.
21 .
22.
23.

Township,

center of road at the ~th·
east corner of lot owned bY

their

Homes tor S•le

31

L-_--lill!WI

last publication of this VIRGINIA
notice, namely, by not later DECEASED
than the 23rd day of. case No. 23578

(10) 14, 21, 28, (11) 4, 11. 18,
6tc

WMT AD INFORMATION

)-Announctn~~tntt

18.

real

estate situated '" Sec. 8,
Town 6, Range u, Rutland

Meigs County
Cammon Plea5 Court

4--GI'IQWIY

17. - - - - - -

Civil

Public Notice

Clerk of Courts

1-C.rd Iff ThtRki
2-1n MtmOrilm

( ) For Rent

of

Public Notice
following descrtl&gt;ed

Larry E . SP-_encer

CL~SSIFIED

( )Announcement

Rules'

Procedure, judgment by
default will be rendered
against you for the relief
demanded in the ,Com·
plaint.
·
'

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

( )Wanted
( ) For Sale

repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner,
Georges

have

shooting

992-6259

IN THE COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
ELIZABETH
SHARP·

I

sewing

Professional
Servictl

on the property of Earle
and Morybelle Schultz off
5~681 In Reedsville. Ohio.

The lzaak Walton Club will

:=========+=======·=·=~t=========+=========i
.----J&amp;-=-F~•1
WANTED TO BUY
HARRISON
REESE
SCRAP
CONTRACTING
TV SERVICE
(Pomeroy
Scrap
e Backhoe
TRENCHING
Iron
NOW
&amp; Metal)
• Septic Systems
SERVICE
OPEN
Line·

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS. TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH POSITIVE I.D.

Public Notice

I

Announcements

-

Roofing, insulation, plum·
bing, and general homemaintenance. For estlmat(
call 615·5496, if no answer
call675·3147 .

No huntinO or trnpassing

TRAPPER Wehaveacom·
plete line of trapping sup·
plies . Traps, dye, wax, and
lures.
Spring
Valley
Trading Co. , Spring Valley

1·304-675-6276

GOOD FOOD - PLENTY OF PARKING
SPONSORED BY RUTLAND FIRE DEPARTMENT

Public Notice

Write your own ad and order by mall with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone wtlen you get
results. Money not refundable.

his

.
s
•
•
B Uslness ervlces

Rates based on double
•
occupancy.

·small investment, large ,r eturns, Sentinel ·Want Ads

S~veiJI

TRAPS and TRAPPING Horses, ponies, horse
Gene Hines, troller, riding lessons. Hoof
Am.. ville, Ohio. 61H48· Hollow61H'IU290.
6747. Dally after 1 p.m.
Gun Snoot Reclne Gun
Racine Fire O.pt. SPOfiS(&gt;n Club.· Every Sun. stortlng
a Gun snoot, Set. nights at 1 p.m. Factory chOke
6:30 p.m ., Bashan. Factory guns only.
choke 12 guage shotgun.
supplies.

by

and

23

Announcem.nts

3

•

.---------..L.-~------~...L---------'""""-----------1 door fund drive of the area
served by the Dept. to

'

DIAURS WILCOMI

John T. Northup, Vicki J. Northup,
VickieJ. Northup to Ohio Power Co.,

'

446·02'14 ..

675-1333

OFF SEASDN RATES
S120WEEKLY
,
S400 MONTHLY

GOOD VARIETY OF CHRISTMAS ITEMS: TOOLS,
TOYS, GAMES, RADIOS, WATCHES, ETC.

Ease., Sutton.

1

In Mason County

':

MAIN
ST., RUTLAND ·
..
.

Home National Bank, I acre,
Lebanon.
.
Tcm Roush to Ohio Power Co.,

0

m lssed

m~chjne

992-2156

'•'

OLD HIGH SCHOOL GYM.N ASIUM

.617 acre, Rutland.
James J. Proffitt, Sheriff, Thomas
L. Fitch et al by Sheriff to Racine

3

446-2342 '

VInyl

•

•

lnMemorlam

Sadly

In Meigs County ·

•

•

..,

Charles

Warren K. Molden, Ka,thy s.
Molden .to Talbott OU and Gas Co. ,
Right of way, Meigs.
Bernard R. Higley, Bernice M.
lligley, Gladys H. Heldergott to
Talbott Oil and Gas Co., Right of
way, Rutland.
Jay E. Stiles, Nettie Stiles to
Donald R. SWes, Nellie Ruth Stiles,

•

"'

sister. Leota Birch .

In Gallia County

FRIDAY, NOV. 20· A.T 6:30 P.M.

D. Barrett, Jr., Ann B.
BaJTett to Talbott Oil and Gas Co.,
Right of way, Meigs.

...

always be remembered.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

NEW
ptbeftd ot 1 holelllaUnom ofter prodoiii!IJ!I vlclGry
Jock
aard Ia lbe dty'•......., eleeUOD for Mayor oftbe latlol!'•lourlh lorlest
oily. Wbllmlre be&lt;ome1J lbe first wllll!l!n mayor to be elected u mayor of

•

SWEEPER

I

to~~~·~~~~~o:
way, Sutton.
FRUIT·FULL - 0..1 Amaz, of I Love Liley lame, was Ia band
Tuesday al lhe Utile Havaaa Tourist Authority press conference ID

,.
Pomeroy
'ISS- Chester
J4J- Portland
247- letart Falls
949-Racine
742...:...Rutland

Mason Co., W. va .
Area Code 304
675- Pt. Pleasant
4SB- le011
S/6- App!e Grove
711- Mason
882- New Haven
895- letart
937- Buffalo

A'"

Right of way, Rutland.

614

j

'

In Loving Memory of My
O.ar irothtr Guy Birch
Who passed away 20 years
ago Nov. 14.
He Is aone. but will

992 - Middleport

:.161- Cheihire
JtJH- Vinton
145-- RioGrande
i'S&amp;-Guyo\n Dlst.
o4:t- Ar,,bla Dist.

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

to

2

Meigs Co. Area Code

•1~6 - GallipoUs

Ease., suttoo.
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee, Arehle
Salisbury.
.
E. Lee,P. of atty. to Ohio Power Co.,
.Raynlond Hoffman, Ora Hoffman Ease., Sutton.
to Raymond Hoffman, Ora Holfma_n,
Meigs County Commlaaloners to
Parcels, Salelll.
Murphy Oil Compa!!y, Right of way, .
Geraldine Davis Young, Dec'd. to Bedford. ·
Elaine Rogers, Marilyn Rice, Leah
Paul Brooks to BlaiJael' Will ~Jeanette Allmayer, Cert. of TriiiUt- vice,Inc.,Rlghtofway,OUve.
fer, Pomeroy.
'l1lomaa E. Ball, Deborah L. Ball
Lydia Davia, MUibn M. Davis, . to Thomas E. BaU, Deborah L. Ball,
Florence Davis, Leah Jeanette All- Pareela, Sutton.
mayer, Edgar A!tinayer, Marilyn
l'hillip W. Wolfe, Anna M. Wolftto
Rice, Pierce Rice, Elaine Rogers, James E. Diddle, Right of way,
Roger! D. Rogers to Hugh H. Davia, Letart.
'4 int. Pl. Lol11191 Pomeroy.
.Marge'?' Douglaa to James E.
Pearle Willla to Frank W. Porter, Diddle, Right of way, liedford.
Jr. and Mary R. Porter,.PI. Lot. 248,
Otia F. Knopp, j!:dna L. Knopp to
Letart.
James E. Diddle, Right of way, Sui·
Forest W. Lee, Leda M. Lee to · ton.
Herald Oil and Gas Co., Tl A Lease,
Joe Proffitt, Kay Proffitt to James
Bedford.

...... ' ........ .

11

call ~4-675- 1293 .

FL32019.

f

•

~------

.. ,

'·

I

'

.\•

�Pa e-12-The Daily Sentinel
lJ

Farms far Sal_e_ _

BETHEL rood·(ust off san·
dhill, 30 acres (rolling &amp;
level land) . Farm pond &amp;
outbuildings, good well,

42 -

Pomeroy-Middle

Mobile Homes
for Rent

45

2 bdr. and 3 bdr. mobile
homes. Call «6·0175 .

nice 6 room house. Will con· 2 bedroom, unfurn. mobile
slder trade. 304-675-Jql ,

home on Rt. 35. Ref. &amp; dep.
required. Call «6·4229.

675·3030.

J5

Lots &amp; AcreoJge

~OTS · Real nlcf campsite
oh Raccoon Creek, an
utilities available, SJOO .
dc:Jwon , owner will finance .

call after 3p.m ,,

256·6~13 .

Would you like to OWrl a
home of your own. we

For rent 2 bdr .• mobile
home in city, adults only .
Call -446·3791.
.

2 bedroom mObile home. J

miles from Porter in country, deposit. Call367·7101.

down payment nor ss,ooo

House trailer 322 Third.
Ave. Adults only, no pets.
Call ..u6·374B or 256·1903.

noreven$1,000. Do what we
cjld Call513·592-9175.

44

didn't have $10,000 for a

SY owner, 3 apartment
house on approx.- 1 acre.

Furnished Rooms

742·2266.
..

. .

Spoct for Rent

COl)NTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Large tots. Call
9'12-7479 .
MOBILE home spaces, Jet.
2-62 at oldY. 30H75-32of8.

OFFICE space or small
bu!iness room . Private
bath. 1508 Jefferson, Phone
3DH75· fq5,

Furnished apts. $210 .,
utilities pd., I bdr., ne-ar All electric trailer lots. E .
HMC, adults. Call «6·4416 W. Schwartz, Locust Road,
Bell meade. 675·1076.
after 7PM.

Live in one, rent others. tr

make your payment . C;,r•
be converted single holT •
City water, will consider
tand contract. 675· 1883 9 5 · 2 bdr. apartment unfurn., 4"-l~__.w-"a.,_.n,_t.ed to Rent
in Crown City, Ohio. Call Would like to rent a 1 or 2
~m.
256-6520.
car garage In Gallipolis
.area . Call 256 · 1~2 ask for
Mobile home in city central Ken. 256·1932.
air and heat, adults only ,
dep. «6·0338 :·
·~·J·~''"-1
...
_, • ., ,. "' •r •

FOR LEASE OR RENT·
Modern 3 bdr. ranch near
town . $300 per month,

deposit

&amp;

references

required. Call STROUT
REALTY 4-46·0008.
we will be having several
homes for rent, lease or
lease with option to buy
within the next few weeks.
All over S200 per mo. &amp;
required references &amp;
deposits. For more in·
formation call Strout
Realty 4&lt;6·0008.
13 bdr . house, 2 baths, fully
; carpeted, $300 plus d~posit ,
·, 35 Chill i cothe Rd., no pets .
~ Call 446·3748 or f56· 1903.

.-·

2 BEDROOM apartment,
kitChen furnished, HUO
program, utilities paid, if
qualifiecl . 304·675·5104 or
304-675-7364.

APARTMENT
Call «6·0390.

for

Rent.

I
Small furnished house,
adults only . cati....U.·0338.

---- - - - -

Furnished upstairs apt. 3
rms .• and bath, adults only,
no pets. clean . Call 446·
1519.
2 bdr ., apt ., large living
room &amp; kitchen. no pets~
Call «6· 3937.

': Unfurnished house for rent, 4 room turn. apt . Court &amp;
• 1_ bdr .• $160 mo., dep. 1 2nd. AVe. 1 bachelor furn.
apt. 1st Ave., fireplace.
~ requirecl. no uti titles paid,
, no pets. 57 Olive St . Phone Call 4--46·1615 or 446·12.0.
( «6·7886.
Unfurn. downstairs apart.
' ---~~--\ 7 rm. house in town. on Main St. Vinton, Oh .
Clean, 4 rm., bath•. large
~ Inquire at 918 2nd. Ave.,
yard &amp; porches. Sec. dep, &amp;
Gallipolis. No phone calls.
ret. Call245·5818.
~ 4 room house for rent or
~ sale over looking Ohio DELUXE 2 bedroom apt.,
Ave., Gallipolis.
( River . Phone 446·1615 or 2nd.
Phone 256·6506.
~ 446·1244.

!

'-------~
~ 5 rm. house unfurn . in
•, Eureka. Dep. required. no
r pets. Call 256·1413.

{ 5 room house In GalliPolis.

l Call after 5, 4&lt;6·3945.
\

~ 5 rooms &amp; bath plus utility

\ room. Clean . . no pets,
: adults only. F'h. 446·1519.

l

9 rm. house tor rent in Rio
Grande. Call-446·3485.

.•. ;\ .. bedroom, brick, 1 112
:.bath, carpet, gas forced air
heat, central air, garage,
~'Kyger
Creek school
t".district . Located on
'l;;i!orges Creek Rd. Rent
SJOO mo. plus $200 deposit.
Available Dec . 1st. Call446·
1171 or «6·2573.

6 rm . house, bath, near
thurman. Ref. &amp; dep.
required. Call 614·286·2394
after 5.
2 bedroom home in · Mid·
dleport. Deposit required .
qii61H92·59,14.
2 bedroom all electric ran·
ch style home. 1 mile from
Recine. References and
deposit required. Available
Nov . 15. Call614-949· 2849.
2 bedroom house, fur·
nished . Brown's Trailer
Park, Minersville. 992·3324.
3 bedroom. Wz baths, full
basement, garage, fully
carpeted, curtains, stove
and refrigator . Low
utilities. Deposit required.
S290 per month. Call 992·
2362 after -4 p.m.

Bradbury
Apartments.
2nd. floor furnished ef·
Heney, rental &amp; dep .
required. adults. no pets.
729 2nd . Ave. -446·0957.

NOW AVAILABLE first
Ave. 1 &amp; 2 bedroom apts.
Adults only, no pets, dep.
req. Phone 446·8221 .
1st. floor unfurnished apar·
tmt;:&gt;nt, deposit &amp; referen·
ces required. Call at 631
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis,
OH .
1 bedroom apts. available
at Riverside Apts. Equal
Opportunity H1using. Call
992·7721.
Available. I bedroom apt.
for rent. contact Village
Manor Apts., Middleport.
992-7787 .
2 bedroom furnished apt.
992·5434, 992·5914 or 304·882·
2566.

h double house. 2 bedroom
furnished.
Depl)sit
requried, Adults J?referred .
No pets. Call614·992·2749.
1

Five room apartment, par·
tly furnished, adults, no
pets, S125 per month plus
utilities. Pholle I§ 14·992·
3201.
Apts. for rent. Furnished 8.
unfurnished . Call992·5908.
2 bedroom furnished $150.
month plus utilities. $50.
deposit. Available Dec. 1.
No pets. 949·2875.
Apartments. 675·5548.

House furn.. 4 rooms &amp;
bath. No pets. Call 992· 7706.
TWO bedroom, furnished
cottage at 2103 Jefferson
i '/X.9e . Deposit required . 304·
j 675·4100, day.

,. -- ________

I -

~J'IJO bedroom house, $200.
~ month , no pets,
1~:'31.675· 3030.

30-4·675·

l~·t1;;:::::;=:::=.::;::::====
Mobile Holmes
1

r2

for Rent

bdr . turn. mobile home
...near Centenary, adults
·only, no pets, priVate lot.
,,,I;.~ II -446·3918.

l

h :bdr. mobile home in coun·
: try. water furnished ,
~ sewer. ref. &amp; dep. required
1 Cafi6U·286·2394 after 5.
·

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes, -houses,
Pt .
Pleasant ancl Gallipolis.
614·«6·8221 or 614·245·9of84.
2 bedroom twin single in
Pt. Pleasant at 205 Poplar
Street. 5200 month plus
deposit. 1-614·263-8322 or.
614·263·2669.
Efficiency rooms bf the
week on Main Street,
Mason, WV . 773 ·5651.
Twin single, larlge rooms
and yard. Pt . P-leasant.
Deposit and references. 1·
614·263·8322 or 1·61-4·263·
2669.

IN Middleport. 2 bedroom.
furnished apartment, 1
small child, 1·304-882·2566.

' 2 bedroom trailer . Adults

~ly :

Browns Trailer Park.
: 61 ..·992·3324.
•~------------~

: 2 and 3 bedl'oom furnished
--mobile homes at New
'Haven. 30H82·2o166.
2 bedroom furnished , Off
SRI, Pomeroy. $190 plu•
utilities, lawn care. $150
.,dej&gt;osit. 61H8H949.

::1bedroom
bedrOOm Mobile Home, 1
apt. Utilities paid.
No pets or drunks. John
Sheets, 3'h mi. south Mid·
dleport, Rt. 7.

~~----TRAILER, 304-895·34116.
;~~-------------

ONE natural gas, 2
.Jifdroom trailer. 1 three
~room all ttectrlc. Near
~year plant, married
ltllllptesonly, no pets. Clyde
B - Sr. Apple Grove.

IN Middleport. 2 room ef·
ficiency apartment, 1·304·
882·2566.
TWO apartments In Cltf·
len, 304-675·1044.
Apartment. 675-6020 after
•• «6·2200.
Available, First Avenue,
Gallipolis. Apartments· 1
and 2 bedrooms, adults
only, deposit required. «6·
8221 .
45

.

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Park Central Hofel.

Furnished room, $115,
utilities Pcf,, stove, refrlg ..
single mole. Call -4416
i after 7PM.

Misc. MtrChlnclkt

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

Krl' 'N' CARLYLE '"

"

Room and board for senior Flrewood·spllt, delivered
citizens In the country. 6U· and stacked. Mixed wood

MOBILE home spaces
availaQie,
Henderson
Trailer Court. 304·675·2946.

Apartmemt
for Rent

54

.

Wednesda , November 11, ltll ,

rt, Ohio

51

Household Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ot·
toman, 3 tables, SSOO. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, $275.
Sofas and chairs pricecl
from $285. to $795. Tables,
$38 and up to $109. Hide·a·
beds,S3-40., queen size. S380.
Recliners, $175. to 5295.,
Lamps from $18 . to S65. 5
pc. difettes from $79 ., to
$385. 7 pc., $18'1. aM up.
WQOd table with " chairs,
$219 up to $4'15. DesK $110.
Hutches, $300. and 5375.,
maple or pine finish.
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak, $675., Bassett Cherry,
$795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $250. and
up to 5350. Captain' s beds,
$275." complete. Baby beds.
$99. Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, $58.,
firm, $68. and $78. Queen
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests, $49.
4 dr. chests, $42. Bed
frames. S20.and $25 ., 10 gun
· Gun cabinets. SJ50 .• dinet·
te chairs S20. and $25. Gas
or electric ·ranges, $295. Or·
thopedlc super firm, $95,
baby matresses, $25 &amp; $35,
bed frames $20, $25, &amp; $30.
Used ,
Ranges.
reJrigerators. and TV's,
3 miles oUt Bulaville Rd.
Opeil 9am to 7pm, Mon .
thru Fri ., 9am to5pm, Sat.
4&lt;6·0322
GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges.
Skaggs
Ap·
pliances, 1918 Eastern
Ave., 446·7398.

71

S65 per cord or 13.5 per half
cord. Hardwood $75 per :
cord or s.tO per half cord.
Call for quotes on large
quanltles. Phone245·5478.

'

.AutaforS.Io

1975 Chevrolet Impala, 2
dr., low mlleage,exc. cond.
Call 441rl218 after 1 PM.

71 Mustang 11 4 cyl., PS,

•

1··

...

'

. ' .~ .'". .. ---r-'
• ...

_.,.,

••
~· ·

N0¥.11. fW1

.,._

~ome

II

AC. AM·FM 8 track,
tires, sharp. Cell 446·
713hfter 5 :00.

1mprovements

PIIIIACIAZINE

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet CIHning
416·-

IIIWLIIAFFLE
!NnfiTAINM!NT

~

APPY DAYS AGAIN

JIM MARCUM Roofing ;
spouting and sl&lt;llno. :jO
vurs· experience. Free
estimates. Remodeling .
Caii:R·9857.
STUCCO PLASTERING . ·
textured celllnos. com·
merclal and residential.
fr'ee estimates. Call 256·
1182.
I

56

Patriot Home Builders will

carpeted and finished
home on your lot. Only
124,500. Phone379·2617.
Lump coal $"5 for deliver.
F.irewOOCI SJO T delivered.
Call379·2617.
Cocker Spaniel pup reg .,
stero system, Luxman
receiver with 501 Boss
speaker. Call388·8240.
.SOx H) mobile holne good for
workshop or stor.age $SOO,
Dresser &amp; mirror $35, kit·
chen table $25, 2 sets of bOx
springs &amp; mattress $15, end
tables $20 ea. Cail388· 9091.
Apeco copier, Scottsman
ice machine, file cabinets.
drafting table, dentist
chair, small freezers, 4 cu .
ft . office refrigerator. Call
388·9698.
Stoves, closing out our en·
tire stock of stoves and
fireplaces inserts at dealer
cost, or less. Outdoor
Equipment Sales, jet. Rt.s
7 &amp; 35, Gallipolis. Ph . 446·
3670. Closed Tues. &amp; Thur.
until Mar . 1,1982.
Large used Franklin Stove
with folding doors, grate,
brass decorations, and tool
set, $100. Call367·0667.
Early
American gold
chair, $50.00. Penny's gold
toam· backed draperies,
150x84, $50.00. Caii388·98D7.

Discontinued cabinets, top,
stove, hood, sink. $1200.
Dale's Kitchen Center. 675·
2318.
Seasoned Oak Firewood.
Call675-2757 after 4 pm.

AKC
Dachshund,
Pomeranian and Poodle
pups, 304-895·3958.
FOUR dachshunds, 304·458·
1620.
57

LUMP coal $45. ton
delivered . Firewood $30.
ton delivered . 304·675·7199.
David Brown tractor, 990
diesel. $1900. sears gas
wall furnace, 75,000 BTU .
$150. 675·2283.
USED wOOden storm &lt;loor,
meta I storm door, wooden
storm windows, nine pane
solid wooden door, 30"·675·
ol444.
DEARBORN propane gas
stove. 55,000 BTU, $50.00,
phone JO.I-458·1042.
2 CE OAR gun cabinets. 10
guns. $225.00 each. 304-675·
3of89.

V·6 BLACK Max 175 HP
outbOard motor, will take
smaller motor and cash.
Callafler6. 304-675-6277.
OAK firewOOd, $40 truck
load, spfif &amp; deliverecl, 304·
882·3415 after 5.

ORIGINAL handcrafted, 7
piece Nativity scene, 304·
675·2581.

Pets for Sale

Musical
Instruments

Lowery Genie organ. $250
music kit with earpriones &amp;
bench Included. For in·
formation Call61,.·.u6·9461 .

AKC Registered English
Cocker Spaniel, 10 mos.
old, red. male, champion
sired. Call245·9135.
Gordon Setter females,
AKC champion sired, 12
weeks old. Call 388·9790 or
4-46·6550.
.

58

. Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Fresh truckload sate from
Florida. · Tomatoes ,
oranges,
tangelos,
grapefruit, pecan yams,
apples. Rayburn's Market,
Kanaugha, Ohio. "-'46·82-47.

·- - - -

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

_____

L-....;------...JL...---------1

AKC

RegiStered

76 Malibu. -4 dr .• auto.
trans .. PS, Pli, AC, 61.000
miles. $1.900. 446·2888
anyt!me.
1977 Cutlass Supreme
Salon. PS. power windows,
PB, reclini~ buckets, T ·
top, velour Interior, like
new. 992·6362. S4,Soo.
···----~

1971 Olds for sale cheap.
Call992·2507.

MORRISON'S Auto sales.
Henderson, WV. Phone675·
1574 or 675·2881.
1977 TRANS AM oiOO cu. in.
motor, automatic, red With
black inter tor, PS, PB, AC,
tilt wheel, 8·track stereo.
.cragers. smoked glass,
side pipes, $4,000. 304-675·
4210.

2 Hammond Spinet organs.
Cherry cabinet &amp; dark wood
cabinet. Exc. conc:t for
home or church. Make
GOVERNMENT
S\JR·
beautiful Christmas music.
PLUS
CARS
AND
2·6235, 2· 7338. Call 949·2118. ' TRUCKS
NOW
ask for Pete.
AVAILABLE through
government sates. under
Ll K E new, electric guitar
$300. Calf 1-714·569·0241 for
&amp; amphlifier. $180. 304-895·
your directory on how to
3882.
purchase. Open 24 hours.

WOOD slabs, mostly oak .
304-675-1048.
APPLE SALE We will offer
For sate square bales of
at a discount on Thursd~y
hay &amp;
straw.
Bred PA System,· Peavey Nov. 19 through Sunday
Hereford heifers. Lawren· speaker cabinet, Ultra hor· Nov.- 22ourbestUSI Rome
USED REFRIGERATOR; ce Burdell. Call2.6·5181 .
ns, mixer and amp. Phone Beauty apples. 4 days only.
electric range. as is; dlnet·
Buy now for the holidays or
675·5027.
te set," chairs .. Corbin and
winter storing. Fitzpatrick
Snyder Furniture, 955 For sale sorghum, I case
Second, Gallipolis. Call4-46· Hammermillln goqd cond., 196-t Chevy, one and a ha If Orchard, State Route 689.
251ocust post. Cail379·2166. · ton dump truck. 1975 550 phone 669·3785.
1171.
moct~l Honda street bike. 8
Rodger's Trading Post 92 Stanley steel door standard ft. truck topper for pickup.
_ .,
Olive St., Gallipolis. Open size and 8 large Moskova Edward I hie 882·2870.
ducKs.
Call
«6·2222.
9·5, 6 days a week. Fur·
nlture, appliances, an·
Corn. ~.50 bushel. 675· 2786.
tiques. Sell. buy. &amp; trade.
Display or Gun case, $300.
· Farm Equipment
Walnut formica, sliding Used tires. Hanshaw's, 61
glass
doors,
lock.
See
at
Sofa-Sleepers,
quality
Lucas Lane Road. 675·7360.
Early model Gravely trac·
guranateed. Full $399.00. Gallia·Meigs airport or call
tor with mower for sale,
Queen $499.00. FREE 367-7615.
Indoor and outdoor carpet, $900. Call446·1570.
DELIVERY Lifestyle Fur·
pink rug, four 6 ft. tong
niture 3rd 8. Olive, For sale hide·a ·bed, good rugs. Phone 675·6164.
80 model Gravely tractor, 2
Gallipolis. 4.46-3045.
cond. Call446·3535.
wheel, 30 in. brush hog
,
Utility trciiler with 6ft. bed, mower, electric start. 8
Whirlpool
refrigerator Like New 38 pes. of matur- rear lights, spare tire. 675·
HP. Call 245·9420 or 24S·
frost free $95, Frigadaire nity clothes, size 10 &amp; 12, 1224.
5286 before 2PM.
refrigerator white $SO, winter &amp; summer. Call 388·
avocado side by side 9991 or 388·8623.
1969 Starcraft pop· up, Gravely parts. used. We
refrigerator $195, 30' Sears
sleeps
8, furnace, new can· have junked several old
electric range $125, Hot·
275
gal.
fuel
tank,
filter
&amp;
model Gnvely tractors
vas.
$500.
675·2'183.
point electric range A()'
and will sell serviceable
white $75, Norge heavy stand Included, $35 . . Call
parts at 112 price. Outdoor
256·1274
asK
for
Anita
duty
washer
$95,
Taylor.
Equipment Sales. Jet. Rts.
westinghouse
dryer
55
Building Supplies
7 &amp; 35, Galllpoli•. Oh. Ph.
avocado $95.
4"6· 7398
Skaggs Appliances at out For Sllle Deer Slayer BuitdillQ materials, block, 4-46·3670. Closed Tues. &amp;
new location Upper River barrell for 20 gage BroWnie brick, sewer pipes, win· Thurs. until Mar. 1, 1982.
dows, lintels, etc. Claude
Rd. beside Stone Crest magium. Ph. 446·272... ·
Winters, Rio Grande, ·o. Gravely tractors, several
Motel. We also have a parts
Cafl245·5121.
1981 models •till In •lock at
department.
~ranklin w~ burner, like
greatly reduced prices.
new. Call 4.46·8056.
Sheet metal. Flilt 20 to 2~ Outdoor Equipment Sales,
Brown plaid rocker ~ Call
gauge . Porcellan enamel Jet. Rts. 7 &amp; 35. Gallipolis.
4-46·4413.
60 Ford car. runs good, coated: Sizes 4 It by 8 fl. 4 It Ph. 4o46·367D. Closed Tues.
$100. 60 Ford pickup, runs by 12 ft. Many bUilding &amp; Thurs. until Mar. 1, 1982.
COUCH, gray, fabric gOOd, good, $250. 76 Honda 360, uses. Prices S5.60 to sa.oo.
best offer, 304-675·3875 af· real good shape, $400. Fen· Tuppers Plai0§ . Ohio 614·
1
JIVIDEN'S
FARM ·
der &amp; hood for 7-4 Chevrolet, 667·3085.
ter 5.
- .. - EQUIPMENT Full line of
left side, $100. Call «6·2821.
equipment, From Long,
ANTIQUE
rectangular
Vermeer, Kuhn, Kelley,
56
Pels for Sale
dining room table &amp; 6 Garden fertilizer, weed and
and many others. With
feed for lawns. 20 lb. bags POODLE GROOMING.
chairs. Will trade for
your selection of parta and
Call Judy · Taylor at 367· complete service. USED:
round wooden table &amp; $2 each. 992·2574.
7220.
chairs. 304-675-3035.
Hydro 70 IH tractor {like
new}, 2·-US Long tractors, 2
Drum stove, Warm·ever
30 inch gas range, $25. factory made. Brick tined. ORAGONWYND
CAT· rakes, hay bind, round
GOOd for home or garage. TERY · KENNEL. AKC baler, bus· hog disk, plows,
Phone 675·2634 .
$85. 614-985·3560.
black Chow puppies, CFA cultivators. CHECK OUR
Himalavan, Persian and PRICES &amp; COMPARE!,
52
CB, TV, Radio
441r1675.
Equipment
Grain fed free1er beef, Siamese k~Hens. Call 446·
ringneck pheasants, also 3844 after 4 p.m.
A t;IEALER · WANTED·
Sears console color TV, eggs. Wllmetta Leifheit,
STEEL BUILDINGS for
good cond .• needs some Rocksprings, P-omeroy , HILLCREST KENNEl.
work, $60. Ph. 446 ·9845 ·
614·992·3-446.
Boarding all breeds, clean v.our area to handle our
and
indoor-outdoor facilities. commercial
agricultural pre-engineereAI!IO
AKC Reg. D-r·
d steel building lines on a
r
mans. Call416·7795.
·
.part·llme basis, good
profit. Call 614-294-3273,
They'll Do It Every Time
ltRIARPATCH KENNELS 8:30AMto6:00PM.
Boarding and grooming.
AKC Gordon setters,
English Cocker SponltiS. wont to trade 41 case trac·
tOr for chup running car.
Caii:R·9790.
JO.I·67H467.

---

1980 Camaro, Z·28 3SO four
spd., take over payments.
Call256·1q•:..·.:.·_ _ __

1"973 FIAT sedan, great
town car, standard. Call af·
ter 6 p.m. l04·675·6277.

RI!PORT

PAINTING · Interior and
exterior, plumbing,
rooting. sonie remodeling.
ilO yrs. exp. Call388·9652.

7:D
7:11

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

1975 3/4 ton Chevy new
tires, 350 V·8 engine,
rebui It · trans., runs real
good, S1,000. Call4o46·3564.
1976 Datsun Pickup with
topper. Good cond. 11,795.
Call after 5 p.m. 992·53of8.
1971 pickup truck.
$500 gets it. 675-1302.

First

197i FORD FIOO, o;, ton,
new fires, good bodyJ $2500.
304-675·5147 weekdays after
6.
- --~---=~~

i3-::_

vao!is&amp;4W11-.~-

For sate 1978 Scout 4·wheel
drive, automatic. Call 388·
8317 after 6:00, please.

1980 Chevy Scotsdale 3 14
ton, 4-wheel drlvt. 4 spcL
power at.ering, 28.000, g.c.,
S7.000. Call JO.I·77H150.
1981 CJ7 hard top jeep, call
31).1·773·5660.

.I'LL JIJ5T
11£ Al!&amp;l\1111..
TilE IH Tl£
SHIP'G LOti.

Call 4~·2801 for termite.
roach. bird, rodent, $pider, ..
and fleas control. Free ·
estimates, Bill Thomas. ~ 1
A &amp; C Home Insulation: ·
Inc·. No Job to small or :
large. 2 yrs. experience &amp; .
training.
Work guaran· ~
teed! save UJ? lo 30 to 50 per ·:
cent on heatmg bills. Free "
estimates. Call 286·7171 or ~
286·5740.
~

1

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

.·~

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 67.5·1331. ~

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex.'
perienced m11SOn, rOOfer,-\
carpenter,
electrician.;
general
repairs and
remodeling. Phone 304·675:""
2088 or 675· 4560.

Chow

THEFALLOUYA
bewildered Colt linda hlmaalf
locked In aide a jail call and
enmeshed In dndiy Intern•·
Uonattntrigua afterHowia take a .
on 1 'timple' case tor them.
toaea the auapact and they both
fly to Honolulu to recover the
man and Big Jack's $50,000
bond. (Pt. I of a two · part
aOd!i.._80mlna.)
CIJWIJ NURSE
WORLD ·~eturf\tO Poland'
Uarian Manynekl, a Pollah
Jew, returna to his homeland to
recount lhe story of hi• aurviYII
during the Nl:zl occupallon, and
to look at ttl a tit uatlon In Poland
today. (60 mlna.)
liD HARVEST RUN This
documentary, filmed on I he
Great Plalna, ex:amlntllhe
American wheat harve•t and
proflleaaomeofth8peoplewho
make it~oaaible . (60 mlna.)
0:30 Clll
LOVE, SIDNEY
10:00 Cil
QUINCY Quincy and
hla vacation traveling compan·
ion, Or. Janet Carlisle, continue
to light 1 myatarJous epidemic
that hll taken tour lives and
stricken several more abOard a
luxury cruiae ahip. (Conclusion;
80mina.)_
(I) IJZe DYNASTY The
counroom 11 atunned when the
verdict Ia delivered In Blake
Carrington·• trial. Ataxia seeks
sweat revenge on Blake when.
ahe movaalntothe art atudto on
Carrington grounda, and
darkneaacloudatheCarrfngton
empire'aluture a a Blake
atrugglaaitoholdhiaa..etaand
fam!!Y ~ather. (80 mjne.)
eCIJaa&gt; SHANNON lt'o • tull
achedule for Shannon 11 he •
trite to oopa with Johnny' a
adjuatment to 1 new environ·
ment and com11tothe aid ofhla
tather·ln·law. (80mlne.)
WHO'S K!EPINO SCORE
NEWS
10:011
lHIVINING N!WS
10:11
c.NUPDATENEWB .
10:30
-OUT Allt!RICA
ALFIIID HITCHCOCK
PRE liNTS

GASOUNE AllEY

Water wells. Commerciatlo
and Domestic. Test holes. ~~
Pumps Sates and Service . ,~· 1
30..095·3802.
•. ~
~-~---~~------ ~

Stark's tree trimming and
removal. Insured. Phone
576·2010 . •

~t

i

HOI,IE BU I LDI NG· Compl · .
ete tiousebulldlng ' services ~·
from foundation . to root,
Local builder with best
referen!=es will build to any
stage or complete job. Also
room
additions
and
remodeling. Call H. S. ,_
Roc Ievitch. 304·576·2130. . ·;
~~-,;;;;;;~=~~-

WINNIE

Plumbing
&amp;Heating
CARTER'S PL UMBING
ANQ HEATING
Cor. Fourth and P-Ine
Phone 446·3888 or «6-4477

I-I AI/U67
CATCH NfJtPOF
M)'!;ELF... S'IOP
ACTIN550

SO I :#IW MY HU91MNP HAVING
LUNCH WITH A ~y WOMN ...
$0 WHAT!' IT WAS I"'RelMa..Y
JUST A liJSIIIIE$S ~~H/

Sltt.r.l

BARNEY

1324.

TIME fOR
\fORE BATH,
JUGHAID

I

:~= ffir&lt;Il'~ar~a~~ ..
~':..tviLLI

It was a stormy

Itwasadark
and stormy night.

I'

'I

l
(

I'M ALL EARS;
ELVINEV

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition servtee. r
commercial, Industrial.
Phone812·2079.
1

DEALER winted for steel CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
lwulldl1191 for your area, to Auto parts, auto repair.
handle our commerlcal &amp; wrecker service, buy
-::::==~;::==== •
·u
Gonerol Hau11111
agricultural pre· envlneer~
Full blooded St&gt;anltl, half d atael building lines on a automobiles. radiators and
Cocktr·half llritany, I ...rt lime 1&gt;111111. Good ~a-les, 416· 7717.
JONES BOYS WATER '
monthS old, female. PhOne profit. 614·294-3273. 8:30
SERVICE. Call 367-1411 orl
4A6·9145.135.00.
367·0591.
;
Ford Factory_flbarg!asa. a
o.m.·6:00 p.m.
ft., truck topper, 3 alldlno
windows, exc. c~~ Asking NOW HAULING-coal
AKC Roglatored Collies, ' A D£ALER WANTED
SJOO. Coil 4441·4412.
champion blood lines. Colt
&amp; llmntone for driveways.
STEEL BUILDINGS
441r631D.
Cell lor esllmatn367-7101.
for your aroa to hllndle our
comm-.rclal
and Four Big Beaver tires,
Largo beautiful English ligrlcutturat pr•ongl,..r• 1200-15 mounted on 10'
Lop rabbi'- &amp; amalf Button d siMI building 11... on a rima. 5 hole lugs. 1350. can
17
Upi!O!tllry
quells: New. 22th atl32 3rd. parl·llmo bula. GOOd 367-GM7.
Ave.ln Golllpoll'
pn.ill. call 614·294·3273,
TRISTATE
8:.3 0a.m. to6!QOp.m.
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
77
Aute IIIP!Ir
1163 Sec. Avo., Oolllpona .
Fish Tank and Pot 51101&gt;
446-7133or446-1133.
.U13 Jacklon Ave., Pl. 63
'
OUallly
AutobodY
&amp;.
Paint
LIV!!I!ck
I P'-nl. 675-2063. Mtwl,,
work. Insurance ·worl\
·TIIUra.,/ Fri. II to6. Tun .. RI!OISTERBD
Polled welcome. sunroola In· MOWRIYS Ullh*Jtry At.
·· I Sof. 11 to 4. Clllck Htl lfOrd .Bull, II mot til .. atllllod from t2G0-1230. Auto I r,124 pt. P~N~ent; _..
our PilllSpeclol.
caii311H75-3030 or 675-4232. Trlm~.441r1NI.
67 4154.
•
. .

ChoW puppln. Calf -

DUCAL BRIDGE PERMiT
,,
Answer: What pure art can produce-"RAPTURE

.•

BRIDGE
Bidding produces problema
By Olwaltl Jeooby
and .4JaD Solllal

NORTH

"Popular Bridle" maga·
zlne lor October Includes a

set of live defensive prOblema. We are. usiDC a couple
in thll columa ,with llilgbt

EAST

WEST

changes thai do DOl really
change the problem. With

.KIOU

.AQI7!1

•.u3

••

toclay'a band try to avoid

looking at the South and
1

ll·IH

•8s
.KJIZ
tAQ
.AIDV83

.174
· tl1&amp;

.J52
sotm1 '

.J

.KQI

East bands.
AJ West you open your ace
of spades. Partner plays the

"

.QJDV

10 and declarer !be jack.
What sboultl you leaa at
trick two7
The lliiiWer is you lead the

+IJIOtlll
.74

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West

,.

kingofclubo!
·
Your play is to estal!Usb a
club triCk if you can before
your ace of hearts is
knocked out.

Nortll
Obi.
Obi.
Pass

West

44&gt;

Pass

Wbat a,bout your partoer's
10 of apat!es7 That card asks
. for a spade contlouaUon. It
means that from his stand·
polot be doesn't want a club
lead. He doesn't !mow that
you bold the king and queen.

Eut

z+ ,
Pus

Pau

Opening lead: +A

Now look at all the cards.

U you don't lead that club

much' of tlie blddlag of thll
band. We don't either and""'
doubt if the editors of "Popular Bridge" like ll. Tltla i&amp;'l

.. right away declarer will
draw trumps and go after
bearCI. You can duck two

bearta, but be will knock out
your ace and get to discard a
club on the last bear!.
Maybe you don't think

play;;.roblem IDfl lbe bldproduce~~ the

t

alng

. lem oryou.

prob-

"H~e"1070

.

AutoPa~

I Jumbles·· AURAL

"(J)I!Jlll

•

&amp; Accntorles

I I I I I I I I I )

ON A (

Jumble Book No. 17; COI'Italnlng 1ta puutn,l• sqllabfe or$1.15 poa1
from Jumble, cJo this neWspaper, BoiC 34, Norwood. N.J. 07t4L tncMM your
neme, eddrau, %1 code end m•k• c:hecks
1bte toN

~=ORO llND BON

alchemynotet
on a chamlatry quiz atachool,
and thereby jeopardlrea the
..cret of Max' a Identity.
(I) IUfiVIVAL 'Secrtta olthe,
African-Baobab' Africa' a great
baob•b, the tree called 'a
carrot planted up aide down,' Ia
theaublectofthleex:tr8.ordlnary
port rail tnmed in Kenya, and
narrated by Oraon Wailea. (80
mine.)
liD RAMIIUN'
8:06 (J) MDVI! ·(DRAMA)"'
"Coogan'• Bluff" 1818
8:30 eCIJ6D&gt;WKRPINCINCINNA·
Tl Johnny comealntoqulte a bit
olmoneyandgoodbuddyVanua
bacomaa
hla
invaalment
counaelor .
8:58 (I) !tBN UPDATE N!WI "
8:00 CDIICDTHEFACTIO,UFE
Blairhae•omegrowinguptodo
when ahalearna that her
glamorous mother' a Impending
surgery ian't for coametle
re11on1, but rather a btopsy lor
brautcanc.-.
Cll700CLUB
CAJ.MOVI! ·(DRAMA)" ¥o

1978 FORD F100custom, 4·
wheel-drive, lock·ln hubs. 83
Excavating
automatrc, .U,OOO miles, .(
new tires, $4,000. 304·1-15· Construction Equipment
for sale. Backhoe 530 Case '
6662.
Constru'cfion, King with 24 •
i4 ~~~o~ta~r~c~rc~l~o~s·==~ ln. back buck.t, $4,200. ;
Located tn Chester. Oh. :
1977 Honda Gotdwlng 1,000, For more information call "
fully dressed, 9,000 miles. collect 1·216·243-0256, ask '
Call «6·0648 after 5PM.
for Paul.
"
SL 125 Honda, 1973. Call af· BACKHOE and Septic tank·
ter 5, 992-7105.
Service. Larry Slden ·
strlcker. 675·5580.
MOTORCYCLE, perfect
·-etectr~cal
for Christmas, 73 Honda ...
350, excellent condition.
&amp; Refrigeration
·-~·31).1·675·5085.
,SEWING Machine repcoln, ,
service. Authorized Singer
1'178 KZ·650·SR, new tires, Sates &amp; Service. Sharpen 4
sprockets &amp; chain. phone Scinors. Fabric Shop,
31).1·882·2442.
Pomeroy . 992·2214.
:
76

J

(i) i:.NJIPOAn NEWS

~erlln'aancient

RON'S Television Servl~
Specializing in Zenith a ~"i
Motorola, Quazar, II"
house calls. Phri 576:~

82

.

Va~r~s
d

~(!I)MR.MI!RUNZICUI81

-~~~~ ··

1967 Nova .Jtwo door hard·
top. 882·243•.

7j __,- ~n.CkS'tOr sa-le~-

HOW "THJ! FOOTWEAR "TYGOOIJ

(-tu·-)

EUk.lnl·clad prll.eltghterl; 1 vi ait
with Canadl•n hockey pl•yera
whO arl aleo prleata: • protUe of
85yearold dieco alngerBeutah
Kerahaw; and a South Dakota
ac::ulplor who II bi11Ung 1
mountatn away In a tribute to the
great Sioux Chief Cr11y Horae.
~mlna.)
.
'
Cll NA'hONA~ GI()GRilPHIC
SPICIAL
(A) REMEMBER WHEN: THE
BIRDS AND THE BEES This
exclutiYI teO aeriea contln·
LMII wtth an examination or the
ttlalory of moraltiy, from the
rigon of Purlt•n ethic a to the
relaxed lttleudea ot today.
(I) I!Jlll GRIATESTAM!R·
ICAN .,.RO A dying accentrlc
billionaire who ponea'aea
a.atonlahlng knowledge about
the Htreta of Ralph' a •uuper
auitaetaHinktey•ndMax:wellon
anexploaivechaaathroughl.lla
Vegaeto halt the destruction of
hla .only legitimate will. (80

ANNIE

7160.

LOCKSMITH
Service.
Residential, automotive.
Emergency service. cawl
882'2079.

1967 Camero, needs work.
Best offer. 675·2907.

..

..,

&amp;"TARTe!:' OUT.

r

J I
AIM.

I

1:00 Clle (l) IlEAL PEOPLE

•
FERitELL's
WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Horne
maintainance
and
remodeling. Phone 388·
9326.

.

1J I

6J)
RfCHARO -MONS
SHOW
liD OULTING
611 •
!NnRTAINMENT

Bl NG'S CONCRETE CON·
' STRUCTION · Specializing
In concrete driveways.
sidewalks,
Plttio,
b~sement,
garage floors
and etc . Free estimates. 11
years experience. Call 367·
78'11.

or 446·us4.

tLENZOZ

Thll!!&lt;oiiMntl·

·-------

1979 Pontiac Sunblrd, -4
cylinder, 20,000 miles, AM·
FM tape, tilt, radials, hat·
chback, great gas mileage,
nice car, must sell. No
reasonable offer refused.
Phone 675·6438.

POIITIWI

b

I HIWSS
KJ K

(1).{1) FAIIILVP!UO
llJ LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
• AND COIIPAN't
(I)
NIGHTLY BUSINI!88

GENES
CARPEr ':
Cleaning. special rates for ~·
Nov. and Dec. only. Call ·
now and save. 6_14·992·6309.1 :;

' 74 DART Swinger, 64,000
miles, good condition, $700.
call after 5, 304·4S8·1728.

TICTACDOUGH
MACNEIL·LEHAEA

MUPPUIHOW
CAROL BUIINI!TT AND
PIIIIINDS Gu••ta : Steve
Lawreno., Tim Conway.
7:30 ~-YOU AIK!D FOR IT
AII01HeR LFE
B.C.: FIRST TKANKSGIYING Anlmetea canman. B.C.,
celebratn
hll
tnt

CAPTAIN STEEME R Car·
pet Cleani~ featured by
HaHelt Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates .
Call «6·2107.

now build a 3 bedroom fullY

I

7:011

54

•

VI~wmg ·

------c'

P~,

1'169 Charger· RepliCa of the
'General Leee' of Dukes of
Hazzard. S1,000.00. 446·0390
or 446·7100.

Television

jAPACHE foldoufcMn~
sJeeps 8, heaterf cookatovt;t
Ice box, phone 304·1182·2442. ,;

new

More than 100 pieces of
brown underpinning for a
mobile home,_used (ust one
year. A seven and one half
1eet by 58 Inch wide oval
rug, and white uniforms
size 9·10. Call «6·3065 after
4:30PM.

DICK TIIACY

Campfnt
Equipment

'

1978 Plvmouth \lolaire, 6
cyl. Call379·2726.

New woodburnlng fur·
nance $450, Davis 700 tren·
cher &amp; hoe $5,500, 40 ft.
Fruehauf box trailer $3,500,
26 ft. goose-neck llat bed
trailer S2,.500. · Phone 61.f·.
256·1216.

1911

and dark night.

U

•
•·

I

APD
ltliiOVII·(DRAMA) ••
"1Uihlllo . . . .11 1180
(I) JOHN CALUWilYINTEA· . •
VIIWI 'Howard C01tll' telll
Cellaway that he thinkalhl
worahlp of aponaln thlacountry
ia acandatoua and ha attacka
aport• wrtterl who talllo r~~port
the m0f8110fdld aida of aport•
i11:011 Dy.(IOmina.)
ALLIN'tMIPAIIILY
11:11
UPD4nNIWI
'
1 1:10
'tMITOIIIGHTIHOW
.
-o:EI-Teofllllo,Mol
Tillie. CIO mlna.J
ANOTHIII LIPI
-IILLIHOW
CIIU-r.MOVIIWI&lt;RP
In Cl~tnnatl: 'Never leave Me,
Luollfa' Herb e.,.:l'tltaalfom hie
wife Lucille. •nd drive a the
atltlon crazy wlth hla awlnglng
~1ch~l~r act. (Repeat)

'

~
llr THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

39 Earth,

"Marne"

in Frence
to Way off

1

on film

5Seize
DOWN
11 Lake port 1 Brazilian
11 Cling to
seaport
12 Latvian
13 Crave
Z Space for
14 Suffix
Spartacus
for depend l'lbesplan
. troop
15 Kind of
4 Suffix for

whoop

5~'
17 Discomfort . hostilely

11 Misjudge

19 Three (It.) 6Bard'

=·

Yeliimiilyii4M1Nr

11·1

Z3Man-made

9 Earthly
It Chevy

of comedy
15 Redolent
of the vine
18 Conunedla

fabric
Z4 Dilpatched

ZIServant
21 Prize

·

21 Fruit
:10 Regiater
Zl God, to the 7 Impersonate Zl Fat
:15 Hilly spot
ZZ
Drum
roll
31 Old note
ZZ
8 Affinned
......,~,...,.......,.....,.

adver~

28 Irish river

dell ' -

%4 Leather
Z5Yeam
28 George

Bush

n On-the-gr·eentrl--tllem
%8...:. ground
(front rank )
31 Strain

-gNlt
3Z MUiical
direction
33 Pantyhose
bane

34 Tell all
31 State,

in French
3'7 Visited

a bistro

,.

38 Tennis lenn L...l..-...L_.J,....J.--'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'a how &lt;to work it:
AXYDLBAAXB

. ,

11 L 0 N G F B L 11 0 W

' ·"

0110 lttter ·olnlply 1tandl for onother. In thli 11mple A ' ll
used for the three L'1, X for the two 0 '1, ete. Sblllo Jetton.
opMtropbu, the · lenl'h and formaUon of the worda are Ill
hlnto. Eaoh day the rode lei ten ore dllterent.
:.

CBYPTOQUOTIS

YQ

yu

VSZ'V

ZIU Y ZW

QV

BWYSTYBXZU

·•

,, ..

DYAKQ
QKIS

QV

DVW

XYFZ
'

IQ v QK z J . -- I X 0 w z H
IHX~
Yesterday'• CryptllqliOfe: THE A_UDIENCE WASSWEJJ:.
THEY WERE SO- POUTE, 11IEY COVERED THEIR
•'
MOUTHS WHEN THEY YAWNED.-BOB HOPE

11

LB

\

'

�Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

·Gallia approves.
·piggyback tax
Call it a cue of the double whammy: two days alter a statewide increase in the sales tax went into effect to generate more state revenue,
Gallia County commissioners
. Tuesday moved to implement a halfpercent piggyback sales tax to help
bail the county out of its financial
difficulties.
The decision came in the af·
ternoon after two public hearings
were held over the past two weeks on
the proposed tax.
The resolution signed by the com·

Middleport. Ohio

Wednesday, November 18, Ita I

Prepare bill for treatn:tent facility

Commissioners cited the Jan. 8 courthouse fire, high inflation rates and
loss of tax dollars from the James
M. Gavin generating plant aa additional reasona for instituting the
tax.
The commissioners' decision last
month came the same day as the
legislature voted to give county commissioners the power to levy a
piggyback sales taxto.help des! with
fiscal. problems. Under the bill, ·
voters have the right to repeal the
tax in·a refenmdwn election.
missioners said "there is a necessity
Gallia County's tax would not be
for such additional funds (which) up for ·referundwn until next
constitutes an emergency necessary November. If the tax were defeated
·for the immediate preservation of in a referundwn, it' would still be in
·public peace, health and safety."
force until the end of the calendar
The tax, which will go into effect year in which the vote was taken.
Dec. 1, is anticipated to generate Hi&gt;"
The resolution must now be cer·
proximately $375,000 in revenue for tified with the state tax comthee county. However, the tax will nlissioner by Nov. 26.
be collected by the state and reimGov. James A. Rhodes signed an
bursed to the county, meaning no increase in the state sales tax,
money will be seen until February raising it to 5.1 percent, at midnight
when the distribution is made.
Saturday as a means of raising more
Commissioners agreed in October revenue for the state and its depart·
to initiate proceedings for the tax ments. Rhodes has pledged himself
passage after county department to having the increase abolished
budget requests exceeded more than when the downturn in Ohio's
$900,000 than anticipated revenue. economy reverses itself.

COLUMBUS, Olllo (AP) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes Ia preparing
legislation to tranaler a now vacant
tuberculosis holpltal In Ne'-vllle
to a non-profit group for uae aa an
alcoholism treatment facility.
The bill' Would give title to the for·
mer Southeast Ohio Tuberculosis
Hospital 'to the . newly-formed
Shephard HID Corp,
Stephen C. Landemian, a alate official who resigned last week, is
spokesman for the group. He said ~

hopes to tum the facility IntO •
bed alcoholllm treaa-. center.

n.

"1be pnJgralllwe're taJldnt about
involves treatment nOt onlY tD the
patient but the entire family aa
.well," Landennan said today.

"There are only a couple of
facilities in the U.S. that are IOlely
dedicated to the treatment · II.
alcoholics," he aaid. "What we plan
to do is raise aNIUnd f4 mlllion
lhfough donations... private fun-

Reagan. . . ___
U.S. negotiators are prepared to

mutual reductions in planned an&lt;! Inplace missUes.
Reflecting the importance pla!!ed
by the !ldministratioo on the new
strategy, Reegan's speech at the
National Press Club was to be
beamed live via satellite to
European television stations. And
most of the cost waa to be paid by the
U.S. govei'I1J!Ient to help make sure
the message reaches the broadest
audience posaible.
The administration Is easer to
counter the growing political impact
of the European anti-nuclear
movement and what U.S. officials
see as a Soviet propaganda campaign lo play on European worries
about nuclear war.
The Reagan speech comes four
A Middleport man was allegedly James J. Proffitt early this mor- days before a scheduled visit by
shot by another Middleport man ning.
·
Soviet President Leonid I. Brezlmev
near the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, W.
Word was received at 2:35 a.m .. to the West German capital at Bonn.
.Main St., according to word received through the Gallipolis Police DeparAdministration officials, asking
'by the Pomeroy Police Department bnent Charles Tyree, III, Mid· not to be identified, said the timing
and the Department of Sheriff dleport, had been ' treated for a was coincidence but one added:
wound around the temple, ap- "We've been very much aware the
parently inflicted by a .22 pistol, at trip is taking place."
Holzer Hospital. Police said that
West German Chancellor Helmut
J
j Phillip Rasmussen, 21, Middleport, Sclunidt
is promoting a Reaganallegedly shpt Tyree and tran- Brezhnev summit rneetins to help
Dr. Charles Weed
sported him to the Gallipolis clear the air in Europe on nuclear
hospital. Tyree was treated and weapons issues. Although adFuneral services for Dr. Charles
,A, Weed, 85, past pastor emeritus of . released. Rasmussen is confined to ministration officials have said such
the Meigs County jail pending the a swnmlt is likely next year, there is
the Calvary Baptist Church in Rio
filing
of charges, it is reported.
no indication Reagan is ready to anGrande, will be held at II a.m.
Saturday in the Calvary Baptist

Middleport man shot early today

Area deaths

nounce it now.
u.s arms control ofticlala say they
expect the theater f«ee nesotlati0118
·atartlng in Geneva lo be complex,
time conswning and toush.
In the "zero-option" plan fails, a
!1lOJ'O limited, faD-back position II
said to include an attempt to win
Soviet acceptance of the planned
deployment of 572 American nuclear
warheads on Pershing II missUes In
exchange for removal of more than
900 !!oviet warheads now in place oo
88-20, 88-5 and SS-4 missiles.
U.S. officials said that would
produce a relative nuclear balance
in Europe between the superpowera.
And since the United States now hu
no medium-range nuclear wespons
in Europe, any reduction IIi . the
Soviet force would be a gain for the
West. .
One official said no · form of
nuclear arms control agreement
now can be verified by natiooal intelligence means alone and Soviet
cooperation will be esientlal.
This does not mean the United
States necessarily will insist on
some sort of on-site inspection, a
concept the Soviet Union has long
resisted, the official said.
There are a wide array of possible
measures that can be taken to instill
confidence in both sides that an
agreement will be lived up to, the of.
ficial said.

Probe deer-car
~Tt&gt;cks Tuesday
Two car-deer accidents were in·

vestigated Tuesday by the GalliaMeigs Post of the state highway
patrol.
The patrol said Oscar J. Qualls, 69,
Pomeroy, was westbound on U.S. 35,
two miles west of Rt. 7, at 7: 10 a.m.
when a deer ran into the path of his
vehicle and died in the collision.
There was slight damage to Qualls'
vehicle.
Paul D. Payne, 18, Gallipolis, was

southbound on Rt. 218, six mites
belowRt. 7,at5:45p.m. when a deer
came across the road and collided
with Payne's vehicle.

The accident killed the deer and
caused severe damage to Payne's

vehicle.

Meig~

County happenings...
Answer three calls

Five defendants forleited bonds
and four others were fined in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds on speeding
char~es were Mary E. Lee,
Pomeroy, $36; Brian K. French,
Athens, $26; Richard Gilkey, Middleport, $33; Randall Kimes, New
Haven, $34, and Taylor Hawkins,
Middleport, foneited a $33 bond
posted on a charge of failing to yield
therightofway.
Fined wee Allen Young, Pomeroy,
$100 and costs and six months
probation, intoxication; Robert N.
Foreman, $41 and costs, speeding;
John. H. Eblin, Middleport,
speeding, $28 and costs, and Robert
Lee White, Racine, $200 and costs,
petty theft.

Three emergency aiDs were anBarbara Scltes, Pomeroy, and
swered by local units Tuesday lhd KeMeth Scites, Jr., Pomeroy, filed
Meigs Emergency Medical Se;..,ice for disaolutioo of marriage in Meigs
reports.
County Common Pleas Court.
At 4:17p.m., the Middleport Unit
According to other entries 'the
treated Sharon Roush at the.~ge
' marriages of Michael E. Norrla and
ManorApartments.At4:26p.m., e · '
,
andMichaelJoseph
Pomeroy Unit took J. R. McDIJniel . Treli and Delao K. Trent were
from the Pomeroy Health p.re Cen- dissolved.
ter to Holzer Medical Center and the
Tuppers Plains Unit at 3:50 · a.m.
Hospital news
took Dorsel Miller from his residence in Cheslesr to Holzer Medical
Velera118 Memorial Hospital
Center. ·
Admitted-Palsy Laudermilt,
Racine; Cia.....ree McDaniel, Jr.,
Rutland; Betty Reed, Middleport.
Discharged-Cart Rairden, Stella
Smith, Virginia 'Ferrell, Edward
Owens.

Mediwn damages were incurred
on Lynn St., Pomeroy, at 12:30 p.m.
Mondsy when a truck driven by Nor·
man Buchanan, Dresden, tumed
from Main St. onto Lynn St. and
struck a parked car owned by
}Jelena Daniels, Pomerov.

Today. • •----'("'C;,:.on:.::t:::in:.:ued=f.:.:ro:::m::..pa!::!!g:::.e~l)~Church hank probe Wl~erway
ROME - An investigation is underway to determine if the Vatican
Bank and leading Roman Catholic charities broke foreign exchange
laws requiring all money brought in to Italy to be converted to lire, the
magistrale in charge of the Inquiry said.
The Vatican Bank allegedly kept the money in its original currencies - dollars and pounds sterling, for example - instead of converting it to Italian lire, court officials said TUesday.
, Seventy-four people, including Nobel Peace Prize winner Mother
Teresa of Calcutla, were notified that they were under Investigation,
the daily Corriere della Sera said. ·

·Reaffirm countries' commitments
CAIRO, Egypt - Presidenll Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and Yilzhak
Navon of Israel reaffirmed their countries' conunibnents to the Camp
David peace accords, saying Israel and Egypt "are under the wn- •
brella of peace forever."
Navon vlaited Mubarak in Cairo Tuesday, and they "dlscusiled
relations, normalization of relatiooa, the peace process and continuation of negotiations on autonomy," Mubarak said.
1be Egyptian president repeated earlier statements that atlempla
to improve relations between Egypt and lhe other Arab countries
. "shouldn't be at the expense" of Israel.
'

Report no serious incidents

'
Landennan said John J . Chester,
a Columbus attorney. Is

--

Nov. 14, ll81.1ftnda: Veal Clllveuleady f~

.....

Feoder -.o: Good IJid Cl1oite 150 1o JOelbo.,
-;JO&amp;Io400lllo.-;400105001bo,ll.- ·
50Dtoa lbl. 41J0.64JO; 1110 ton. 11:11 14 50-N:
700toalbl.tUNI; ... andover..ui ·
'
!"eeder IWfen; OoodllfiiiChoiee 2&amp;0 IOJOeibl

tUG; JO&amp;IO IIOIIIo. 3UI.IO· 4001o lllllllo. 11.~
II; IIOOioQ ibo., -.10; iiiO 1o llliii&gt;L »&lt;10· '1Q0

••nd

to•lla. J7.1G·4UD;
oYer ••DHS.10:
Foede&lt; Bolio: Good IJid ~ 110 IO !110 lbo.
lHI; lOO lo ... lbo. -JO; .., 10 11111110.. ,.:
4UI; IOOioMibo..- ; IIDlolltlbo. -~~·

'IQOioDU..IT.IO-GJO:•W-.0..7 ' '
- - . .... bollaaiOIIlllbo..a:tJJO

-·-

Booiiii,DII&gt;LIJid.......

'

811....... cowa, uWilleo H.IM); caMeniJid

and-

v.. - - tS.INI.
'
' Ba~IIM-71,
Top
:aloo•lbo. a.o.10.

-'

PID ... tllf hood IN'/,

-~II&gt;L ondupli.IHI.

16-11 •' iood

proJec:l !aUed the property wouJcl be
relumed tD the alate.
•
- "Tbere hu not been • final
declaloa oa the bill; the c:antenll of
the bill; or If Indeed It will be Introduced," Daly llllid.
,
.
But Landennan llld be upecq
the IIII!UIIl'e 1o be ln&amp;rodaced 1n IIIII
House by Rep. Claire M. BaD Jr., RAthens, and In the upper chamber by
Sen. Oakley c. Collllll, llc-lrGntAin.

1

By ROBERT E. MILLER
.u-lated Pnu Write~
; COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
&amp;nate committee hu voted to
·correct an embarrassing error that
:otherw!R would have cost Ohioans
$70 m1l1kln by July 1,1983.
·' Withoul,dlssent, the finance com'mittee approved an amendment to
the state's $778 million capital imyrovements bill WedneSday nig!lt
reducinl the sales tax from 5.1 cents
;to5centsoathedollar.
'
Leadera aaid the mistake in the

HAM SALAD•••••••••••••••••• ~.~~·•.$1.39

Figures show economy growjng
WASillNGTON- The economy actually grew at an annual rate of
0.6 percent rate in the tliird quarter of this year, rather than declining
at that rate as had been estimated previously, the Commerce Department reported today.
In .a preliminary estimate last month, Commerce Department ofliclala lJ!Iid economic activity fell at art annual rate of 0.6 percent in the .
July.S.ptember period.
·
The increase in inflation-adjusted gross national product was mostly
due to a 'build-up of Inventories, and therefore seemed unlikely to
. change the views of most analysts that the nation is in a recession.
In other wordlf, businesses were still turning out new products and
materials in the July.S.ptember quarter, but other government repor·
Is indicated those businesses were having trouble selling the producls.
So analysts inside and outside the govemment are saying real GNP
probably is falling at an annual rate of :i percent to 5 percent in the
· current quarter- a more reliable indicator of a recession.
Industrial production and retail saies figures.are way off, and unemployment is rising - apparent indications that businesses are cutting
back and layins off workers.
Real GNP, which includes all goods and services 'produGed after
dlacounting the effects of inflation, ,fell at a rate of 1.6 percent in the
~=equarter.
·
IIUil, corpOrate profits.alao. rose slightly in the third quarter
I
aftt!i'"dlcllniilg llharply 1n the second, the new report said.

POTATOES .......~~?. 1.97
1

MARGARINE

2/$1.19

31b. Yellow

Quarters
24 01. Broughton's

ONIONS .......... ~.~! 69'

QlTTAGE

Golden Ripe

BANANAS .••..• ~.~.Z/69'

PINEAPPLE ••••••••••••••••••••••~:~ 7'1.
46 01. Golden Isle

House approves record budget

TOMATO JUICE••••••••••••••••••~~~.8'1
24 oz. Del Monte

!Tribe Size)

WASHINGTON - The House, urged to strengthen President
Reagan's hand at the bargaining table with the Soviets, Is overwhelmingly backing a record $197.4 billion Penlagon budget complete
with the B-1 bomber and MX missile.
On the day Reagan launched a major arms-control initiative, the
HOuse approved the measure ~I Wednesday night.
Rep. Jooeph p, Addabbo, chief sponsor of the bill as chairman of the
defense appropriations subconunittee, sought to delete $1.9· bijlion
each for the IJ.I bomber and the MX missile - the backbone of
Reagan's strategic modernization program.
AddabbO, a New York Democrat, argued that the Pentagon didn't
need the money because it could dip into more than $30' billion in
\Ul,obligated funds left over frompreviollS years.

.

16 c11. Sweetbrier

BABY DILL PICKLES ••••••••••~::. 8'1
Joz.'

'

REGULAR JEU.OS. ••••••••••••• :2/6f
II" Reynolds

"·

ALUMINUM
25 Count Hefty

PAPER PLATES.~··········:~~: •• $2.19
15 oz. Armour

'

· Marathon has new stock offer

Tool Pa~·
Tool Caddy

YOUR CHOICE

3 Position

Lexan"'
Handle
All Steel
Hood
Brilliant
Headlight
Dial-A-Nap
Adjustment

-

FINDLAY - The Marathon Oil Co. said today that the board of
· directors of U.S. Steel has offered $125 a share"for 30 million shares of
· Marathon stock, a move aimed at heading off a takeover attempt by
Mobil Corp.
Mobil, the nation's second larg~st oil comj,any, last month offered
$85 per share for two-thirds of Marathon's outstanding stock. The company said it would spend up to $5.1 billion in the takeover bid.
Marathon officials strongly opposed Mobil's effort, cllaUenglng it in
federal court in Cleveland by arguing that such a takeover would ·
"radically restnlcture" competition In the U.S. oil·business.
II Cleveland, Marathon and Moblllawrers had no iniedlate"commnt
on the offer and said they did. not know how 'the offer would affect the
proceedings in U.S. District Court.

95

$

'

.'

:Today's lottery winners
ClEVELAND - 11M; winning nwnber drawn Wednesday night In
. : the Ohio .Lottery's daily game "The Number" waa 156. The lottery
: reported earnlniB of $298,112.10 from the wagering on the drawlnl .
. Earninl!l came on sales of • •1186.50, while holders of wiMing tickets
:

•

12" Beeter·Ba
Brush· Roll

SAVE
·'2o-

BIG 2.1
PNkH.P •

Motor

l\llltttl
tank·

: are entitled to share t&amp;B7 ,014, lottery officilallsaid.

On/Oft Tile
Switch

·: State weather forecasts
Rain 1itely tonight and J"rtday mqmtng, chan8inl to anow by lllie af·
t.rnoon. Lon tonllht In the low
TeiJ41111atures fallin&amp; Into the
ll1lda by Friday enn~n&amp;. O.aet of pndpllallm 10 perc:ent tonliht
and Friday. WlndiiiOUtheulerly lcliUUtllll'l) 1NI mph tonlcht·

*'

MEIGS INN

Est..wOidoF•It•C-Salllrdi7~Mooday: Fair
throush the period. HlP In • • . . . . , llld Sunday and In the
lW&amp;I'IIII to the mld-411 MOIIdiJ. Imrlln till Ill.
.

&amp;,nncld -

'

{

I

'

.

.

was hooored by tile While House Historical AsHOCiation
for her work In restoring tile Jiving quarters of the
manilion. A total of $822,640.91as contributed to the ef·
furt. I AP Lllserphotol

FIRST LADY APPLAUSE - President Reagan
applauds first lady Nancy Reagan after she spoke at a
ceremony Wednesday at the White Hoose, where ohe

Pan·e~

upholds de(Jision

A panel of three doetors, following
According to the.unofficial report,
a day-long hearing at the United . a panel of three doctors, twu o~
States District Courthouse in Colum- whic~ were osteopaths, heard witbus Tuesday, upheld a decision to nesses for the hospital and for Dr.
suspend surgical privileges of Dr. Ehlinger during the day-long
Norman Ehlinger at Veterans hearing. According to the report, the
Memorial Hospital, according to (ianel voted unanimously to uphold
unofficial reports.
the hospital. The panel is to issue a
Dr. Ehlinger was suspended by
written report within five days of
the medical staff of the hospital in Tuesday's hearing.
Last June, in the federal district
February, this year, and subsequently by the,hospital's Board of l'OUrt, Judge John D. Holschuh had
TrusteeS. There ....,law oults filed
;.. ued orders to both parties that no
follO)Ving the action.

-~

statements were to be issued to (.he
media while hearing of the case was
pending. It was also set down at that
time that the decision of the panel
was to be final anp nol subject to
judicial review. It was reported the
panel was compost'&lt;! of a physician
from Pennsylvania, one from

Nor~

thern Ohio and one from Colwnbus.
Il was reported earlier that the
panel was to be an impartial one, approved by both sides involved in the
l'OIIti'OVersy,

Neg~tiations

,.

•

to
begin Dec. 14

December 14 was set as Ihe dale to
begi11 negotiations with the district's
non-certified employes when the
Soulhern Local School Board mel ill
recessed session Wednesday night.
The board approved a selfevaluation form for teachers. The
form was worked up by teachers under the chainnanship of Robert
Beegle. Suzan Gilmore was employed as an substitute custodian
and Romaine Frederick was named
to serve for four hours daily as
secretary at the junior high school.
A list of staff members who are
authorized to have access to student
records was approved by lhe board.
The board turned down an applicant

WASHINGTON - The U11ited States will go ahead with plans to
deploy medium-range missiles in Europe in 1963 if the Soviets drag out
negotiations on President Reagan's proposal to slash nuclear and,con·
yentional weapons on the continent, adn\inistration officials say,
The Soviet Union rejected the Reagan initiative Wednesday, but
U.S. officials said the initial reaction wasn't surprising and one added:
''The door is stili open as far as talks are concerned.'!
Official reaction from U.S. allies in Europe, where many television
stations carried Reagan's speech live, was laudatory, refieding relief
.that the administration was stressing peace, ·rather than engaging in
hypothetical·discussions of war.
· There was bipartissn praise in Congress as wei!.

EUREKA FA.LL SALE
SAVE NOWI
18 qt. Top
Filling Bag

Riffe said he hoped for final action
on that proposal, aloog with a major
prison conatruclion plan and some
other pending matters, so that
lawmakers can take a recess until
January.
One of the measures still pending, ·
before the Senate Ways and Means
Committee, was a House-passed bill
repealing the so-called casual
salesprovision of the Sliles tax law.
It requires used cars sold by individuals to be taxed at their book
value instead of the actual purchase
price even if the latter is lower.
Many legislators have received
complaints about the caiual sales
.provision, saying the state has no
right to mandate the usually higher
rate.
The Senate ad(jed about $50
million to the capital construction
bill, hiking it from a House total of
$72ll million.
It biggest addition was $20 million
for a biological science 'center at
·Miami University in Oxford, but
there were numerous smaller
allocations for many other higher
education institutions.
Among them were $i million for
improvements for the Ironton branch campus of Ohio University, $3
million for a . clinical teaching
· facility at Ohio State University, $1.8
million for donnitory renovations at
, Bowling Green State University, $1
million for parking facilities at the
University of Cincinnati, $777,500 for
a laboratory at Hocking Technical
Institute, $4.9 million for a fashion
design center at Kent State Univer·
sity and others.
Although the massive measure
comes at a tune when the state is
slrainfn~ to keep its bills paid, there
is no assurance that any of the
projects will be built soon. The bill
requires the state. Office of Budget
and M~nagemenl to give ·the goahead only if it can ·certify that debt
service is avililable to fund them.

Will go ahead with missile plan

EROY

1 Sadlon, 12 Po... 15 Cents
A Multlmocll.l Inc. Newsp~~per

retarded, Ia due for a Senate floor
vole today.

4

DEL MONTE KETCHUP. ••••• ~!~~. $1.09

20ft. Cord

newly approved state biJdset bill
resulled from the uae Of computers
to nialte a series of chaliees In sales
tax brackell and thai the 5.1 ceniS
was accidental.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr.-,~New Boston. said, "We,never
intended that to happen. We're going
to plit it back to five cents."
The big c~pital improvements bill,
containing dozens of construction
and improvement projects at state
universities and parks, and facilities
for the mentally iU and mentally

l'tomemade

10 111. loho Baking

enttne

;O fficials to cotTect
.'emhaJTassing error'

BARBECUE LOAF. •••• ~ •••••••• ~~~.$2.79

'

'

WAITER 11
WAITRESS

preu

Eckrich

'

callle olaady, """ II lo 12 hilber. ~I hood

Rhodea'

at y

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 19, 1911

PEPPER LOAF••••..• ~ •.•.••••. ~~~!2.79

ELBERFELDS IN

Prices taken fram the auction of Saturday

Daly,

20 01. Del Monte Crushed or Sliced

Perlie F. Jewell, Jr., , Judy A.
Issue license
Jewell to Herald Oil and ·Gas Co.,
Ri~ht of Way, Rutland.
A marriage license waa issued to
Bedford Township Trustees to J. David Lee Williamson, 21, Rolland,
D. Drilling Company, Right of Way . and Cherie Lynn Lightfoot, 19, Rl. 4,
Bedford.
'
•
Pomeroy.
Stella M. Atkins to Herald Oil and
Gas Co., Right of Way, Scipio.
Office to close
Ralph S. Duncan, Mildred Duncan
to Herald Oil and Gas Company
The Farmers Home Ad·
Right of Way, Salisbury.
'
. minislrlltion in Pomeroy wiU
Elwood Howard, Sr., c;;lara
closed tomorrow and "•'rl••• I
Howard to Herald Oil and Gas Co.,
because of an out.of-town meeting.
Right of Way. Scipio.
.
Albert Goeglein, Ida Susan
Goeglein, Avery Goeglein, Helene
Goeglein, Charles Goeglein, Maxine
· Goeglein to VIllage of Middleport
Lots, Middleport.
'

Market report

Jack

Val.lO,Ne.154
smrlp!rted 1911

-=retarJ, llld lnlereltl "' the alate
I!OIIld be proleeled In the deal. He
llld II woold ensure . lhllt If the

TOILET TI.SSUE •••••••••••••• ::~~·. $1.39

Property
transfers

RICHFIEW - Security fotces at the Colisewn said that the crowd
at Tuesday nilht's Rolllntl Stones concert ·WII noticeably 1- we1J.
behaved than Mooday night's, ·but added that no serious incidents
'"'"' reported.
'
A crowd of more than 111,000 packed the CoUsewn for the second of
IWOIOJd-out .._.there by the British rock group. .
Before the beclnnlnl of the group's aecond appearance at 1:50 p:m.,
sherllts c~ep•w had auul'!l 11 people, with nine of the arrea11
COIIdn8 oo ~ charges and two 011 felooy cha!Jes of drq
abuse.

Landennan, formerly an~~
director of the Ohio Department of
Indllllrlal Relations, aald the corporatioo is currenUy headed by a
board of lrullees and hu not elected

~till project. Clli.aer, a
Rlpablia!n party !Uir, II a
lrultee af the c:orpcll81icla.

4 Roll Charm in

To end marriage

Five forfeit bonds

Probe accident

cel977.

\

1 lb. TASTY BIRD LIVERS••••••••• 89'
12 OL WELCHES

Chur~h.

The Rev, William Clark and the
Rev . Luther Tracy will officiate.
·Buri.al will be in Calvary Cemetery,
Rio Grande.
A flag presentation will be made
by American Legion Lafayette Post
No. 27. Masonic services will be held
by Vinton A &amp; FM Lodge Nil. 131 at
7:30 p.m. Friday in the McCoyMoore Funeral Home, Vinton .
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7·9 p.m. Friday. The ·
body will lie in state one hour prior
tothe service.

Landerman said It would open
1n111a11y aa a 34-bed facility, ex- .
Jlllldinl to full capacity wilhla lhe
followlns two yeara.
"We're·talldns employment of 40
to 50 people," he aald. The Alhenl
County bolplt.J hu been cloSed IIJI.

oftlcera.

..:reon=Un:::·:::ued:::.:.:.fro=m::.!pa=;g•:.:l:..)_ __

discuss other options, Including

dral.llng. .. 1o set the project oft the
ground.''
'

e

.

•

•

for the positioll of head football
coach on the basis that lhe applicant
did not have previous experience in
the coaching field. Applicallons for
the position are being accepted, but
applicants must live in the Southern
Local School District, must be cer·
tificated in the field by the State
Department of Education and must
have had prior experience.
~our
applicants for the
treasurer's post in the district were

interviewed and the session
recessed until Nov. 23. At an earlier
meeting, the board employed Hilton
Wolfe, Jr., as girls' varsity basket·
ball c~ch. Connie Enslen, regular
coach, 1s on a leave of absence.

Police officer shot in Ontario
RUSSIAN FIREPOWER- Soviel mlaslles sucb as the ones shown Ia
• these photoo wlll be part of tile locUli ol negotlalio118 starting Nov. 30 on
curbing theater nuclear Neapo"" in Europe. At tap, tbe Soviet SS-4, a

fixed po~illoa missile capo.ble of carrylag one nuclear weapon. Below, the
Sovlet8S-Ii, also on older design lor fixed-po~itiun deployment and single
warhead armament (AP Laserpboto)

AKRON- An Ontario police officer was shot in the face early today
and authorities have surrounded a large junkyard near Mansfield
seeking the assailants. In Toledo, a Ill-year veteran police office~ was
wounded in the leg in a running gun battle.
~
Police say the Ontario officer, David Pugh, is in serious condition at
Mansfield General Hospital this morning. Pugh is reported to have
been shot about 5 a.m. today by the occupants of a van he stopped for a
traffic violation.

Qh.io Power firm seeks ·new rate hike
Meigs County custonltrs of The clition.
"These new hidden taxes will shnOhio ·power Co. will probably be
ploy
drive up the cost of producing
paying higher bills soon, thanks to
electricity
for ua and increase the
new taxes invoked by the Ohlo
size
of
the
monthly biU for our
Legislature.
customers",
Heller
said.
The company said today it is filing
For
utilities,
HeUer
said, the
amended tariffs with the Public
General
Assembly
increased
costs
Utilities Commission of Ohio to raise .
by
raiSing
the
aales
and
use
taK
to 5. I
hl&amp;her tax revenues required by the
cent,
extendlntl
tile
sales
and
use
per
. state governmeni.•
tax
to
certain
repairs
and
services
Since Sunday, Ohio uljlities have
not previously taxed, and Increasing
been subject to increased taxes and
the
public utility exclle tax by ap'state service fees, aa the governproximately
7&amp; percent.
ment attempts to aupport spending
4
'ln
addition,"
Heller noted, "the
of $13.5 billloo over the next two
Legislature
voted
to increas.e
~rs. Other ~ and convariOus Environmental Protection
IUIIk'l'll of &amp;oods and cerlaln serAgency fees and illcreaall till budlel
vlcetln ONo alaoare affeeled.
a.rlll A. Htll,er, praldenl of of both the utltlties commiaaioa and
ado Paww, aa1d tbe new tarlffa • the Office of Conlumerl eou-1.
.wl produce~ 16.1 TheM new COlli allo will add to the
miiUon In~ ....... ''but alae !I.IDOIIthly bllll."
Dot Glib' penny~ praflf' tD bllplote · He said the amended tarlffJ would
take effect ,Immediately ,upon II&gt;'
"" ~·· allllll! llnanclal con-

proval by the Public Utilities Commission. For the residential
customer usin~ an avera~e of 650

kilowatt hours per month, the increase would be about 27 cents a
month.

Dutton Drug Store hit by
armed robber in Middleport
A man armed with a gun robbed
Dutton Drug Store, Middleport,
Wednesday at approximately 7:15
p.m.
According to Sheriff James J.
Proffitt, the man walked In the front ·
door and walked . back to the en~ of the pharmacy department
and demanded the drop dilaudid
and morphine which wu placed In a
paper bag. As the man l,rt be ••lei...
"haveagoodday."

~!

The armed man then went out the
back door traveling south 1111 foot.
He is described to be approximately five feet, 10 tO II Inches .
tall, and weighed approximately 180
J)OWids. He had Usht brown hair
collar len&amp;th, and was wearln&amp;
army fatigue type jacket and blae

.U:

·jeans.

It wu the third armed robbery 1n
tho Pond area In the paat twa
'
·

-a

\

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="205">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2795">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="47072">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="47071">
              <text>November 18, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2223">
      <name>weed</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
